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Man fatally shot in South Shore

A man was killed in a shooting in South Shore on Sunday night, Chicago police said.

The man, who was shot in the face and chest, was found in a third-floor apartment in the 7800 block of South Bennett Avenue at 9:01 p.m., police said. The 42-year-old was taken to University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition. He later died.

No one is in custody.



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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school basketball rankings for Dec. 15, 2024

A little bit of stability arrived to the Super 25 this week.

The top three teams remain the same. All turned in strong performances this week. Kenwood beat Simeon, Bolingbrook impressed against Oswego East and DePaul Prep dominated Rich.

Niles North and St. Laurence made the biggest leaps this week. Niles North, ranked No. 10 in the preseason, opened the season without Yaris Irby and picked up a couple of losses and dropped down the rankings. They knocked off Simeon handily on Saturday and rose to No. 11.

St. Laurence upset Homewood-Flossmoor in overtime at Mount Carmel on Sunday. It jumps all the way from No. 21 to No. 7.

It was time to add a lot of teams that are off to hot starts. Hersey, Geneva and Downers Grove North are all undefeated and join the rankings.

Hersey, with new coach Bob Widlowski, has knocked off Palatine, Stevenson and Prospect. Geneva has wins against Downers Grove South and Conant. The Vikings and Huskies were expected to crack the Super 25 at some point this season.

Downers Grove North is a surprise. Jim Thomas has a new group playing well. The Trojans have a big weekend ahead with games against Hinsdale Central and rival Downers Grove South.

St. Patrick, Joliet West, Evanston and Bradley-Bourbonnais drop out after losses. The Boilermakers lost to Homewood-Flossmoor. No shame in that, but the score was 72-38.

Super 25 high school basketball rankings for Dec. 8, 2024
With record and last week’s ranking

1. Kenwood (7-0) 1
Beat Simeon

2. Bolingbrook (7-1) 2
Faces Brother Rice Saturday

3. DePaul Prep (8-1) 3
Nice win vs. Rich

4. Waubonsie Valley (8-0) 7
Moses Wilson is a factor

5. Mount Carmel (7-0) 8
Dominated Young

6. Lincoln Park (8-1) 6
Lost to Arkansas team

7. St. Laurence (6-2) 21
Beat H-F in overtime

8. Homewood-Flossmoor (8-1) 4
Hosts Andrew Monday

9. Warren (5-2) 9
Beat Lake Forest

10. Niles North (5-2) 18
Handled Simeon

11. Brother Rice (8-0) 14
Marcos Gonzales is rolling

12. Simeon (4-2) 5
Two-loss week

13. Rich (2-3) 10
Couldn’t hang with DePaul

14. Bloom (6-1) 13
Hosts Kankakee Friday

15. Kankakee (4-1) 15
Dominated Thornton

16. Waukegan (5-2) 16
Xavi Granville can play

17. St. Ignatius (8-1) 11
Lost to Loyola

18. Benet (8-1) 12
Survived Marist

19. Curie (5-1) 17
Lost to Lincoln Park

20. Glenbard West (8-0) 20
Beat Proviso West

21. Young (3-4) 19
At Simeon on Tuesday

22. Hersey (8-0) NR
Bob Widlowski winning

23. Geneva (8-0) NR
At Batavia Friday

24. Marist (8-1) NR
Rokas Zilys can score

25. Downers Grove North (8-0) NR
Big weekend ahead



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College football payoff: What was once considered cheating is now standard practice in NCAA

You want a good college football team?

Buy one.

Not kidding. Find some 1-percenter alums — top of the money-pyramid guys (and gals) — and get them riled up. They’ll purchase your star quarterbacks, receivers and linebackers, who then will lay waste to foes.

You remember when SMU got the so-called NCAA “death penalty’’? It was 1987, and the school had cheated so well (and flagrantly) with what would now be paltry amounts of money — buying players with cars and cash — that from 1981 to 1984, the Mustangs’ record of 51-5-1 was the best in all of football.

Star running back Eric Dickerson got paid, but so did many other players. It was considered cheating back then. Bad, bad. In fact, SMU’s penalty was so severe that it didn’t even play football in 1987 and 1988.

But look who’s back! Because it’s all legal now. SMU essentially bought 18 Power Four transfer players this year — from Georgia, Ohio State and Texas — finished 11-2 and made it to the national championship playoff tournament. Sportico reported the SMU backroom power move thusly: “One gathering of a dozen backers brought together a net worth of more than $15 billion. In the room that day was Chiefs owner Clark Hunt as well as his uncle Ray Lee, who’s worth an estimated $10 billion.’’

Indiana, a school that had one winning record in football in the last 17 years, suddenly is 11-1 and ranked ninth in the country. How did it do it? New coach. New portal players. New way.

Name, image and likeness pay is the carrot. As eternally crabby former coach-turned-congressman Tommy Tuberville said with disgust, “Look at Indiana. They went out and bought them a football team, and look where they’re at.”

Look at it.

And learn. Few people like that college players are now age-group professional athletes (I have long suggested “young pros’’ as their title rather than the silly mouthful NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision players), but the courts have mandated it. When adults treat the games as big business, the college athletes are, by reason and law, workers who must get paid.

Of course, once you buy a star, you have to keep him happy or he might enter the transfer portal and take a better offer elsewhere. South Carolina freshman star pass rusher Dylan Stewart recently agreed to return to the Gamecocks next season for a reported $1.7 million. South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers gets a reported $2 million.

Michigan liked beating Ohio State so much this season that to continue the -whupping, it seduced superstar high school quarterback Bryce Underwood to decommit from LSU and play for the Wolverines for the astounding figure — reported even by Underwood himself — of $10 million. Take that, Nuts!

Conversely, Ohio State is so enraged over Michigan players’ attempt to plant their school flag in the middle of the Buckeyes’ field after last month’s gigantic 13-10 upset that state Rep. Josh Williams introduced a bill to make such flag-planting a felony. You’ve been warned, Michigan. And, of course, Ohio State is out buying more guys to maybe someday actually beat Michigan in a game.

It’s an arms race, folks, and a free-for-all. The NCAA is clueless on how to stop it. That organization had its fun for more than a century, never willing to let the young working men in on the piles of cash the old men were accruing.

“This is the plantation mentality,’’ said former longtime NCAA chief Walter Byers in his 1995 book, ‘‘Unsportsmanlike Conduct: Exploiting College Athletes.’’ Thanks for that, Walt, seeing as how for 40 years you made the rules.

Weird, nasty, suddenly chatty old pro Bill Belichick will be, bizarrely, coaching North Carolina in his first college venture. Why? Because college ball is now the pros. Consider that Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders has an NIL figure reported at $6.2 million, while 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy will make $985,000 this year.

You want chaos? Marshall coach Charles Huff abruptly took a better deal at Southern Mississippi, 36 of his players entered the portal, including all three quarterbacks who played this year, and Marshall bowed out of the Independence Bowl because, basically, it doesn’t have a team.

I think we should salute Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter, the wide receiver/cornerback from Colorado. The kid makes some good coin, but, man, did he earn it, playing both ways. In one game, Hunter was on the field for an astounding 161 plays. Hope he punched the time clock for overtime. In America, we get paid for work.



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Bears’ next opponent: Bills’ 48-42 victory snaps Lions’ winning streak

DETROIT — Josh Allen ran for two scores in the first quarter and threw two touchdown passes in the second half, leading the Buffalo Bills to a 48-42 victory Sunday that snapped the Detroit Lions’ franchise-record 11-game winning streak.

The AFC East-champion Bills (11-3) have won eight of nine, taking advantage of Allen’s ability to make plays with his right arm and legs.

Allen was 23 of 34 for a season-high 362 yards with touchdown passes to Khalil Shakir and Ray Davis. The dual-threat quarterback ran 11 times for 68 yards and two scores a week after being the first NFL player to throw and run for three touchdowns in a regular-season game.

He extended a league record by throwing for multiple touchdowns and rushing for more than one score in six straight games.

Jared Goff matched a career high by throwing five touchdown passes for the NFC North-leading Lions (12-2), whose loss gives Minnesota a chance to pull into a tie for the division lead with a win against the Bears on Monday night at home.

Buffalo extended its franchise record with 30-plus points in its eighth straight game — becoming the first team since the 2013 Denver Broncos to pull off the feat — and scored the most points against Detroit this season.

Coming off a 44-42 setback against the Los Angeles Rams, the Bills were not as effective on defense.

Goff’s fifth TD pass came with 12 seconds left when he connected with Jameson Williams from 3 yards with 12 seconds left, but the Lions couldn’t recover the onside kick to set up a game-ending Hail Mary try.

The Bills joined the 1966 New York Giants as the only teams in NFL history to score 40-plus points and give up at least 40 points in consecutive games.

Allen’s dazzling talents were the difference in a potential Super Bowl preview.

He threw a 33-yard pass to Ty Johnson on his second snap and converted a third down with another throw to the former Lions running back, picking up another 24 yards, after rolling right and showing patience before passing to set up a 1-yard sneak.

On the first snap of the next drive, Allen started in the shotgun and moved up in the pocket, backed up, rolled left and threw to his right on a 28-yard pass to running back James Cook. He ran untouched on a 4-yard touchdown run around the right side to give the Bills a 14-0 lead.

Detroit answered, pulling within a touchdown on Goff’s 12-yard pass to Tim Patrick, but it couldn’t slow the Bills when they had the ball.

Buffalo coach Sean McDermott chose to go for it on fourth-and-2 from his 49 on the ensuing possession and Allen found Johnson wide open for a 31-yard catch to set up James Cook’s 6-yard touchdown run to restore a two-touchdown lead midway through the second quarter.

Lions coach Dan Campbell was aggressive as usual on the next drive, keeping the offense on the field with a fourth-and-4 from the Bills 46. Goff validated the decision with a 21-yard pass to Amon-Ra. St. Brown.

Goff threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to Dan Skipper five plays later, pulling off a trick play with a throw to an offensive lineman who reported in as eligible to pull within a touchdown.

Just when it looked as though the Lions might get routed in the second half, Goff converted a third-and-17 with a 66-yard touchdown pass to St. Brown.

The Bills, though, kept scoring.

Injuries

Bills: WR Curtis Samuel (shoulder), LBs Dorian Williams (elbow), LB Matt Milano (groin) and OT Spencer Brown (head) were hurt during the game.

Lions: DB Khalil Dorsey (leg) was placed on a backboard and carted off the field late in the first half. … CB Carlton Davis (knee) was also hurt in the second quarter. … DT Alim McNeill (knee) left in the third quarter and didn’t return.

Up next

Bills: Host New England on Sunday.

Lions: Play the Bears at Soldier Field on Sunday.



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Kyle Williams’ girls basketball Super 25 rankings for Week 1

For the first time since 2011, the Sun-Times will have weekly Super 25 rankings. The rankings will last through the end of the season. It’s an exciting time as girls basketball continues to grow in popularity throughout the Chicagoland area.

Lyons comes at top in the first Super 25 rankings for girls basketball. The Lions have been one of the most impressive teams in the area to start the season. Lyons (11-0) has two stars in Emma O’Brien and Nora Ezike.

Lyons has impressive wins over Benet, St. Ignatius, Main South and Evanston.

Benet and Kenwood have also had impressive starts to the season. But Lyons’ undefeated record and resume speak for itself. While O’Brien and Ezike garner most of the attention, junior Gwen Smith has also stepped up for the Lions, providing some much-needed shooting to space the floor.

With the Benet win serving as a statement, what’s been most impressive about the Lions’ start is the consistency to which they’ve played with. Coming out of a three-game stretch against Downers Grove North, St. Ignatius and Maine South undefeated showed the consistency needed from the Lions.

Talent has always been there for Lyons, but it needed to put together long stretches of high-level play, which they’ve done so early on.

Kenwood has also been stellar to start the season. Despite Fremd’s valiant comeback attempt, Kenwood’s dominant start was too much for the Vikings to overcome. With seniors Ariella Henigan and Diann Jackson, the Broncos have battle-tested leaders to lean on. Junior guard Danielle Brooks is a dynamic shot-maker, senior Icesis Thomas is the team’s best defender and London Walker-George can impact the game in a multitude of ways.

It’ll be interesting to see how the rest of the rankings shape up as we head into holiday tournament time.

Super 25 girls high school basketball rankings for Dec. 16, 2024

1. Lyons (11-0)

Undefeated heading into a showdown against Lyons

2. Kenwood (9-1)

Impressive wins against Fremd and Missouri state champions.

3. Benet (9-1)

Aria Mazza is a light-out shooter. Benet has impressive depth.

4. Fremd (10-2)

Wins over Lake Zurich and Waubonsie Valley.

5. Young (5-2)

A good win against Loyola at the Chicago Elite Classic.

6. St. Ignatius (7-1)

Senior Reganne Reardon has taken a leap.

7. Waubonsie Valley (10-1)

Hosts Wheaton North on Dec. 23.

8. Loyola (7-2)

Losses against St. Ignatius and Young

9. Nazareth (8-2)

Lost against Benet.

10. Main South (8-3)

Hosts Glenbrook North on Thursday.

11. St. Charles East (5-2)

Play at St. Charles North on Friday.

12. Downers Grove North (7-2)

Good win against Maine South.

13. Prospect (8-2)

Alli Linke impacts the game on both ends.

14. St. Charles North (11-0)

Big game on Friday against St. Charles East.

15. Glenbrook South (6-4)

Plays Deerfield Wenesday.

16. Lake Zurich (5-5)

Needs a signature win.

17. Huntley (10-0)

Wins against McAuley and Hersey.

18. Montini (7-3)

Nikki Kerstein can score with the best of them.

19. Mother McAuley (7-3)

Big game against Montini this week.

20. Libertyville (7-4)

Rebounded from double-overtime loss to Prospect.

21. Lane (7-2)

Plays Kenwood on Wednesday.

22. Batavia (6-2)

Hosts St. Charles North on Monday.

23. Hersey (6-3)

Impressive win against Geneva.

24. Hinsdale Central (6-3)

Faces Downers Grove North on Friday.

25. Glenbrook North (7-2)

Could use a signature win.



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Teuvo Teravainen ignites Blackhawks’ offense in win over Islanders

The setup probably wasn’t what the Blackhawks envisioned in the offseason.

With the Hawks on a five-on-three power play in the second period, forward Connor Bedard snapped a pass to his right to veteran Teuvo Teravainen, who scored his seventh goal of the season and first since Nov. 27 against Dallas.

When the Blackhawks brought back Teravainen, they saw him as a veteran forward who could help accentuate Bedard’s game. Teravainen’s defensive prowess was meant to cover for some of Bedard’s deficiencies in that area, while the Finnish forward also possessed the vision to allow Bedard to use his lightning-quick shot.

But throughout the majority of the season, that plan didn’t come to fruition as Teravainen struggled offensively — the veteran forward has been held scoreless 21 times in 31 games.

But in Sunday’s 5-3 win against the Islanders, Teravainen’s impact was felt in a big way. He had two first-period assists — including an impressive pass through traffic to find forward Ilya Mikheyev for the first goal of the game.

“He was really good tonight, so hopefully he can build off this,” interim coach Anders Sorensen said. “We all know that he’s better than he’s played, and he knows that, and we’ve had conversations about that. so, really good response from him tonight.”

Though he’s not playing on a line with Bedard, the Hawks still need more from Teravainen, who they signed to a three-year, $16 million contract in the offseason.

“It’s good whenever you can help the team win the game,” Teravainen said. “The puck was bouncing pretty good for me and my line today. Good effort by our line.”

Shutdown penalty kill

The Islanders were 0-for-4 on the power play. A strong penalty kill was a hallmark of Richardson’s tenure, but it’s clear that the core tenets he instilled in the Hawks still remain.

“[Assistant coach Kevin Dean’s] done a great job,” Sorensen said. “He’s very direct, and he lets them know exactly what we’re looking for and what the other team’s looking for.”

Defenseman Alex Vlasic also lauded the team’s ability to learn opposing teams’ power-play tendencies and prevent them from scoring. He was weary of propping up the potency of the penalty kill.

“I don’t want to jinx anything, but I think we’re … playing well,” Vlasic said. “We’re paying attention to what we’re learning about the other team’s power play and what they try to look for. We’re bearing down on the chances we get to clear the puck down the ice and just making sure that everyone’s fresh and going 100%.”

Injury update

Defenseman Seth Jones has been on injured reserve since Nov. 16 after injuring his right foot in the Hawks’ Nov. 14 game against the Kraken after blocking a shot.

Sorensen said Jones has been progressing and that the veteran defenseman was on the ice before Sunday’s game against the Islanders, but that it was “going to be a little bit longer here” in terms of his return from injury.

Goalie Petr Mrazek could be on the ice Monday as he recovers from a groin injury, which he’s dealt with multiple times throughout his career. Before his injury, Mrazek was amid a solid season, sporting his lowest goals-against average since 2019-20.

Connor Bedard  Ilya Sorokin

“It’s one of those things, the randomness of the game,” interim coach Anders Sorensen said. “I thought [Saturday] we played better and didn’t get the result, and today we kind of did bend a little bit, but we never broke. We didn’t play our best game but found a way to win.”

Drew Commesso

Commesso pitched a shutout through the first two periods Saturday but finished with 20 saves on 24 shots because of the Hawks’ third-period collapse.

Blackhawks Devils Hockey

The Hawks have lost many games this season because of a miscue that escalated into disaster. On Saturday, that was Wyatt Kaiser failing to clear the puck during a marathon shift. That led to three quick goals in a 4-1 defeat.



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Blackhawks’ resilient effort pushes them past Islanders

Sunday’s Blackhawks game had a familiar rhythm to it. The Hawks scored first for the 20th time of the season and gave the lead back to the Islanders before the end of the first period.

The game see-sawed back-and-forth, but somehow, the Hawks found themselves with a lead headed into the third period. During the second intermission, the Hawks knew they were in a familiar position. The Hawks were fed up with coming up short and watching opposing teams capitalize off their mistakes and snatch away victories.

But after the Islanders scored 47 seconds into the period to tie the game again, it looked like the Hawks would fade again in the third period. But instead of faltering, they stood tall and star Connor Bedard’s shot from the slot found the back of the net for the go-ahead goal with 54 seconds left before defenseman Connor Murphy’s empty-net goal added insurance to the lead.

Bedard said he shot it at goalie Ilya Sorokin’s chest and “somehow it kind of found its way in.”

The bounces worked in the Hawks’ favor in their 5-3 win against the Islanders that snapped a two-game losing streak.

“Going into the third period — in between intermissions — that was something that everybody was just kind of piping up,” said defenseman Alex Vlasic, who finished with two assists. “Enough of what’s happened the last week or so – I guess all season, honestly, just with the way that we’ve been able to blow leads – and so today, for us to do that, everybody had to bear down and make the simple play.”

After coming apart in third periods in the previous two games, the Hawks were able to keep the game within distance. They never let the Islanders gain the upper hand.

“It’s one of those things, the randomness of the game,” interim coach Anders Sorensen said. “I thought [Saturday] we played better and didn’t get the result, and today we kind of did bend a little bit, but we never broke. We didn’t play our best game but found a way to win.”

The Hawks certainly had a breakdown on the Islanders’ goal in the third period, allowing the Islanders to tie the game 3-3. The Hawks got caught in a tough change that allowed defenseman Noah Dobson to have a ton of open ice to get to a high-percentage area. Those types of gaffes typically led to a cavalcade of mistakes for the Hawks.

The Hawks aren’t built to make a playoff push, but with several young prospects on the roster, the Hawks needed to see more resiliency out of this group and they answered that call on Sunday.

“Right now, we’re struggling to find wins, and so everything we can get is important for us,” Vlasic said. “It was one of those games where, similar to the last few, where we get the lead and find a way to give it up. And for us to find that extra gear in the third period and not back down and get that goal back was huge.”

Sunday was the Hawks’ first win at home since Nov. 27 against Dallas. Given that many of their fans can’t watch their games, they understand how important any win is, particularly wins at home.

“Our fans are coming out every game and supporting us, giving us a lot of energy,” Bedard said. “It’s so much fun to play here. Just to get a win for them and celebrate at the end of the game like that is great to see.”



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UnitedHealthcare CEO murder suspect could be moved to New York this week

UnitedHealthcare CEO murder suspect could be moved to New York this week – CBS News

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Lugi Mangione, the man accused of murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, could be extradited to New York as early as Tuesday, according to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. Ali Bauman reports.

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Person fatally struck by Metra train in Oak Park

A person was killed after being struck by a Metra train in Oak Park on Sunday afternoon, Metra officials said.

The person, whose identity has not been released, was struck by an outbound Union Pacific West train near the Oak Park Metra station about 3 p.m., Metra officials said. Inbound and outbound trains on the line were halted and “extensive delays” were expected.

The incident is under investigation.



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Spirit of Progress atop former Montgomery Ward building is taken down for repairs

The statue atop the old Montgomery Ward building is heading to the suburbs to be refurbished.

The Spirit of Progress, a statue depicting the goddess Diana, has stood on the tower of the Montgomery Ward and Co. administration building since 1929. The building — constructed in 1927 on the east bank of the Chicago River — is now condominiums.

Restoring the Spirit of Progress is one of several projects underway to maintain and preserve the building, according to the One River Place Condominium Association, which manages the building, which manages the building at 758 N. Larrabee St.

The Spirit of Progress was taken down Saturday and will be reinstalled next spring. The Conservation of Sculpture and Objects Studio in Lake Forest will restore and repair the bronze figure.

The Spirit of Progress, a statue installed on top of the Montgomery Ward administration building in 1929, was taken down Saturday for repairs. It will be reinstalled in the spring.

The Spirit of Progress, a statue installed on top of the Montgomery Ward administration building in 1929, was taken down Saturday for repairs. It will be reinstalled in the spring.

“We are proud to be maintaining this important aspect of the Chicago skyline,” the association’s board and homeowners said in a statement.

The 22.5-foot female figure stands with her left foot on a globe and holding a torch high in her right hand, and in the other she points a caduceus, an ancient symbol of commerce.

The Spirit of Progress is a replica of a gilded weather vane, called Progress Lighting the Way for Commerce, on the former Montgomery Ward offices at 2 N. Michigan Ave, according to the history website Chicagology. That statue and the tower it stood on came down in 1947 when the building was found to be structurally unsafe.

That statue was modeled after the weather vane on top of the Agriculture Building at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition.

The Spirit of Progress, a statue installed on top of the Montgomery Ward administration building in 1929, was taken down Saturday for repairs. It will be reinstalled in the spring.

The Spirit of Progress is a replica of a weather vane that sat atop the Agriculture Building at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition.

The sculptor of Diana was unknown for several years and remains disputed, according to the Smithsonian American Art Museum and Chicagology.

It could be the work of Joseph Conradi, who did several sculptures for Chicago buildings. At least two of Conradi’s relatives have said he made it, according to Chicagology. But photo captions from 1929 credit the artist George Mulligan.

The Montgomery Ward administration building and the original catalog house building across the street were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. The condo association is currently seeking city landmark status for the building.

The Spirit of Progress, a statue installed on top of the Montgomery Ward administration building in 1929, was taken down Saturday for repairs. It will be reinstalled in the spring.

The Spirit of Progress, a statue installed on top of the Montgomery Ward administration building in 1929, was taken down Saturday for repairs. It will be reinstalled in the spring.



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