SPRING GARDEN — It’s been a while for the Spring Garden boys basketball team. The Panthers shot down Jacksonville Christian 46-39 at home Monday night. The last time they won was Dec. 5 at JCA, and in between that victory and the one Monday was nine losses. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement In that one, Spring Garden […]
Read MoreTag: Published Opinion
As Ethan Grunkemeyer enters transfer portal, Penn State’s Matt Campbell must rebuild roster [opinion]
Penn State football coach Matt Campbell faces a plethora of questions as he begins to reconstruct the roster when the NCAA transfer portal opens Friday. At least 20 players from the 2025 team are planning to put their names in the portal. At least 23 others have exhausted their eligibility. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement With only […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Can the Bears' owners find true happiness in an enclosed stadium off the Skyway?
CHICAGO — You have to give credit to the Chicago Bears. They don’t take no for an answer. For the last four years Illinois residents and politicians have been telling the Bears they would not help them build a new stadium with taxpayer assistance. The Bears would not listen. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Renderings were released. […]
Read More
Julia Poe: Can the Bulls sustain this hot start? An aggressive, hustling defense suggests they can.
The Chicago Bulls want to be real. Their 6-1 record, best in the Eastern Conference, should be convincing enough on its own. Only the reigning NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder (8-0) have won more games. Yet the Bulls can’t escape the specter of uncertainty cast by the last three years of mediocre, myopic and ultimately […]
Read More
Penn State breezes in opener, but needs to clean up a few things [opinion]
A season with championship aspirations began on a brilliant afternoon Saturday at Beaver Stadium and generally went as expected. Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen ran for touchdowns. Drew Allar threw the football efficiently. Dani Dennis-Sutton was dominant on defense. All of which led to Penn State’s 46-11 victory over Nevada, an overmatched but game opponent. […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Cubs slide continues — and Wrigley Field fans are starting to get antsy
Time flies when you’re in a free fall from first place. The Chicago Cubs were tied for first with the Milwaukee Brewers on July 28 when the team surprisingly announced President Jed Hoyer had agreed to a contract extension. They fell 8½ games behind the Brewers after Friday’s 3-2 loss at Wrigley Field and were […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: From Ryne Sandberg tributes to All-Star Game plans, what we learned in an eventful Cubs week
The Chicago Cubs had a momentous week with important games, big announcements and the death of franchise legend Ryne Sandberg. Subscribe to continue reading this article. Already subscribed? To log in, click here.
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Justin Turner’s walk-off home run seals Cubs’ 5-3 win over Orioles
Greg Maddux Tarp Sliding Bobblehead Day at Wrigley Field on Sunday began with Chicago Cubs fans chanting for a 100-year-old man as he threw out the ceremonial first pitch. And it ended with 40-year-old Justin Turner smoking a pinch-hit, two-run, walk-off home run into the left-field bleachers in the ninth inning, sending the Cubs to […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Cubs boss Tom Ricketts can take a bow after a successful week of chairmanning
Tom Ricketts, you’ve just secured the 2027 All-Star Game for Wrigley Field, extended your president of baseball operations and retained all of your top prospects at the trade deadline. What are you going to do next? “I’m going to Rickettsville!” We can only dream that Ricketts, the Cubs chairman, co-owner and khaki enthusiast, will soon […]
Read More
Column: After honoring Ryne Sandberg, the Chicago Cubs drop another big game to the Milwaukee Brewers
MILWAUKEE — After a moment of silence for Chicago Cubs legend Ryne Sandberg Tuesday night at American Family Field, the Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers continued their fight for the National League Central lead and the league’s best record. Sandberg’s death, announced in the middle of Monday’s game, took some focus off the opener of an […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: A kinder, gentler City Series? Say it ain’t so, Chicago.
The parking lot across the street from Rate Field was filled with tailgaters a few hours before Saturday’s game between the Chicago Cubs and White Sox. Fans of both teams were seen sharing beers, brats and unknown substances like it was their last summer blowout. It was a celebration of baseball on a humid afternoon, […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Cubs and White Sox are on opposite ends of the trade spectrum as deadline nears
White Sox pitcher Adrian Houser might or might not be on the Cubs’ radar. But the idea of Houser facing a Cubs team that possibly could acquire him at the trade deadline added a little spice to Friday’s opener of the City Series at Rate Field. Has the Cubs brain trust talked about Houser? “Well, […]
Read More
Rick Kogan: Of fighting and surviving, ‘Baddest Man’ is a soaring biography of Mike Tyson
You can not, without the assistance of the internet or its loud new voice called artificial intelligence, name the heavyweight champion of the world. OK then, his name is Oleksandr Usyk, a 38-year-old Ukrainian. He unified the WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO titles when he defeated another heavyweight in May 2024. That boxer’s name was […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: As Katherine Legge qualifies for her 1st NASCAR Chicago Street Race, will this be the last one?
Katherine Legge is used to being in the spotlight after years of driving Indy cars, so being the only woman competing in Sunday’s NASCAR Chicago Street Race would be no big deal. Legge, the only female NASCAR driver, entered Saturday needing to qualify for one of the final four spots in Sunday’s Cup Series race. […]
Read MoreJulia Poe: The Bulls keep drafting the same type of player. Will it ever pay off?
The Chicago Bulls clearly have a type. That’s OK. Everyone has their preferences. And for the current Bulls front office, that prototype is crystal clear — gangly, teenage wings who offer the potential of versatile playmaking in a raw, unproven package. So when Noa Essengue’s name was called Wednesday night as the No. 12 pick […]
Read MoreColumn: How the Chicago Sky still can win this season with a shift in mentality
The Chicago Sky need a mentality shift. Yes, even after a win. Tuesday’s gutsy finish against the Los Angeles Sparks offered a welcome balm to both the Sky and their fans, who had seen only one win at Wintrust Arena this season. In equal measure, it offered false hope. That’s what happens when one underperforming […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Jed Hoyer doesn’t need to wait to improve the Cubs — as the Rafael Devers trade proves
While Chicago Cubs President Jed Hoyer spoke to reporters last week about being in the “information-gathering stage” before the July 31 trade deadline, his protege, Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow, was already a step ahead. Breslow and San Francisco Giants President Buster Posey executed the season’s biggest shocker Sunday, with the Red […]
Read More
Settlement answers some questions for college sports, raises more [opinion]
Amateurism in college athletics was pronounced dead at 9:18 p.m. Friday. That’s when federal Judge Claudia Wilken gave her final approval to a settlement of the House vs. NCAA case, which will allow schools to pay athletes beginning next month. For those schools that opt in, they can pay athletes up to $20.5 million from […]
Read More
Paul Sullivan: Tarik Skubal, Javier Báez and Pete Crow-Armstrong bring an October-like buzz to Cubs-Tigers series
DETROIT — Detroit Tigers fans have been pointing to this weekend’s three-game series against the Chicago Cubs as a measuring stick. Comerica Park was buzzing Friday night as the best pitcher in baseball, Tigers left-hander Tarik Skubal, faced the major league’s top-hitting offense in the series opener, while Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong, one of […]
Read More