Chicago - A message from the station manager

Remember The ’85 Bears? Actually, No You Don’t

By David Rutter

Presuming the NFL stumbles into actually playing football this year without infecting all the players, fans, coaches, and officials, Chicago will celebrate an anniversary.
This is one of those physical events that seems closer in the rear-view mirror than it really is.
It’s been 35 years since the Super Bowl that Chicagoans revere.
Not so long ago, right?
Wrong. A really long time ago, even though it doesn’t seem so.

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Posted on June 30, 2020

Tip Your Cap To The Negro Leagues

By The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum

Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, in collaboration with civil rights hero Rachel Robinson and baseball legend Hank Aaron, are joined by scores of baseball players and other professional athletes, sports executives, entertainers, journalists and others for an unprecedented tribute to the 100-year anniversary of the founding of baseball’s Negro Leagues.
The Tip Your Cap campaign, which is being directed by Negro Leagues Baseball Museum President Bob Kendrick, is intended to bring long overdue recognition and respect to the enormously talented and courageous men and women who played in the Negro Leagues from 1920 through 1960. The campaign was conceived when long-planned centennial events in major league stadiums across the country were cancelled due to COVID-19, and the response has been extraordinary.

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Posted on June 30, 2020

Service Time

By Roger Wallenstein

The issue of service time was one of contention included in the sordid public display of selfishness on the part of Major League Baseball and the players association as plans for this season were negotiated.
Surprisingly, the owners easily gave in to the players on this one item, agreeing to grant a year of service even if nary a game is played this season.
All of which means that players eligible to become free agents after the 2020 season, will still retain this vaunted privilege. Stars like Mookie Betts, George Springer, Marcus Semien and Trevor Bauer, despite playing in a 60-game season as was announced last week, will remain eligible to entertain multimillion-dollar offers this fall while all other players can add a year on their journey to free agency.
We often hear about today’s players’ reverence for the past. They recognize the cruel and unjust treatment endured by Jackie Robinson as he opened the door for all the other Black players who followed him. Prior to the formation of their union in 1966, each individual player was at the mercy of the owners when it came time to negotiate one-year contracts rather than the common multi-year agreements of today. Any alert present-day athlete understands how powerless his brethren were decades ago.
Nevertheless, do today’s players know what service time meant 80 years ago when both benchwarmers and All-Stars missed entire seasons because their country needed them during World War II?

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Posted on June 28, 2020

The Beachwood Radio Sports Hour #310: Baseball Is Back! (But Is It Really?)

By Jim Coffman and Steve Rhodes

The virus doesn’t care how much you want to watch a game. Plus: Other Sports Are Also Back Pending Death; Pandemic Baseball Sucks; Hub Bubs; Hall Of Fame Hossa; The Mystery Of Mitch’s Motivation; Choking On Chalk; and It Was Unmistakably A Noose.

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Posted on June 26, 2020

Dear Media: Stop With The Racist Mascots And Team Names

By The Native American Journalists Association

The Native American Journalists Association joins the National Association of Black Journalists, National Association of Hispanic Journalists, Asian American Journalists Association, and Society of Professional Journalists to call for immediate discontinuance of race-based sports mascots in media.
NAJA is joined by NABJ, NAHJ, AAJA, and SPJ to reiterate its demand for the immediate and permanent discontinuance of racialized sports mascots by news outlets. This discontinuance should include clear policy development and implementation that clarifies the harm they cause, and the practical editorial methods to avoid their use on all platforms.
The continued portrayal of racialized mascots in news media directly violates fundamental tenets of professional journalism. The Society of Professional Journalists Code of Ethics makes clear that journalists should act to minimize harm:

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Posted on June 25, 2020

Safely Reopening High School Sports Is Going To Be A Lot Harder Than College And The Pros

By Tamara Hew-Butler and Phillip D. Levy/The Conversation

Along with the revival of professional sports comes the yearning for a return to amateur sports – high school, college and club. Governing officials are now offering guidance as to when and how to resume play.
However, lost in the current conversation is how schools and club sports with limited resources can safely reopen. As an exercise scientist who studies athlete health and an emergency medicine physician who leads Michigan’s COVID-19 mobile testing unit, we wish to empower athletes, coaches and parents by sharing information related to the risks of returning to play without COVID-19 testing. This includes blood tests to see if athletes have already had COVID-19 plus nasal swabs to test for the active SARS-CoV-2 virus.

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Posted on June 24, 2020

SportsMonday: Ride, Sherman, Ride!

By Jim Coffman

Talladega should be shut down as in it should be flattened. It is absolutely irredeemable. The comprehensive destruction of the Alabama racecourse could be a centerpiece of a modern-day march of justice and obliteration through every square foot of NASCAR country.

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Posted on June 22, 2020

The Mystery Of Mitch’s Missing Motivation

By David Rutter

Welcome to the Strange Mystery of Mitch Trubisky’s Missing Motivation.
I just dropped in to see what condition his condition was in.
Sing it, Tevye, and narrate your strange story . . . “Mo-tee-vay-SHUN.”
Trubisky Is going to be really good for the Bears in this pending fourth year of his diaspora. All his friends and allies say this is true because he is now really inspired to play quarterback for the Chicago Bears and really cares about his mental stability for that job.
Before? Not so much apparently. There is little comfort in colleagues’ assurance he is working on mental stability. Or that now, he really wants to be a good quarterback.

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Posted on June 22, 2020

TrackNotes: Single Crown

By Thomas Chambers

The operating BS of the majority is that if one horse wins all three of the races this year, it will be a Triple Crown.
No. And. NO!
Although Tiz the Law was quite impressive in winning Saturday’s running of the 152nd Belmont Stakes (Grade I, 1-1/8 miles, $1,000,000), it was really a non-competitive, dime-a-dozen 9-furlong zip race that should forever carry an asterisk. All the talking heads, except Bloodhorse’s Steve Haskin on FoxSports1, either lent full endorsement to this race being a true Belmont and Triple Crown race, or basically avoided the issue.

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Posted on June 21, 2020

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