Chicago Bears's Chicago Bears friend's fan blogs
May 17, 2012
Richard Kagan
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May 16, 2012
Richard Kagan
It is pretty certain that LA will come out of the Western Conference playoffs. What remains much more in doubt is the Rangers-Devils series. NY has a 1-0 lead in the best of 7. But this series is by no means over. The Rangers play almost the oppositie of LA. They grind it out, slow down the game, and let their goalie become the anchor of defense. A goal or two is usually all the Rangers need to win a game. That pattern may remain in the Eastern Finals, but it will be sorely tested if NY plays the LA Kings.
The sleeping giant, that is the LA Kings, has woke up with a vengence. The Rangers play like the the little engine that could. It huffs and puffs its way toward the finish line.
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May 11, 2012
Richard Kagan
I am a long-time Bulls fan. I looked at the score in disbelief after not having seen the game tonight. I saw a brief low-light of how Asik missed two FT's late in the game, and how Iguodala hit 2 FT's with 2.2 ticks on the clock to win the game. Never mind the C.J. Watson's desperation heave at the buzzer was close---this was a game the Bulls should have won. Even without Rose and Noah. From what I can see, if you out-rebound a team by a lot, which Chicago did, you should win the game. The Bulls owned the boards. Luol Deng played like an All-Star. He had a double-double and came up big tonight. Carlos Boozer had a 1-11 night and that hurt. Why did Richard Hamilton see so many minutes? Ok, he had 19 points, but 37 minutes is a lot for a guy who has not played that long in a game in many weeks. That may be his most mnutes of the year. I know, he's had the big game experience. But if he's huffing and puffing, that's not going to score points. I like the Bulls so much. And it hurts to see a terrific team run into bad luck and bad games, particularly in Philadelphia. Kyle Korver did not score at all. Why? There needed to be more effort in getting a man who can shot the three in rhythm, in a flow, where he can do some damage.
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May 08, 2012
Richard Kagan
C'mon Chicago, win a home game in this crazy first-round matchup vs. the 76'ers. The injury bug has submerged this team which is taking on water fast. I hope they can step on a dry dock and salvage a game to extend this series.
This Bulls miss Rose obviously, and without Noah, they look ordinary. Joakim Noah is a heck of a player who does some big things like get offensive rebounds, play post-up defense, and creates screens for his teammates. Oh, he has a ton of double-doubles if you want to check. Every night it seems he scores 14 points and grabs 13 boards. Some nights, it's 17 rebounds. He is relentless on the glass and the Bulls miss that energy. It will be tough to win against a young, hungry team that has some talented quick guys, but "tonight's the night", as Phil Collins once sang. You have to win this game to move on to the next. I'd hate to see the season end on homecourt.
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May 06, 2012
Richard Kagan
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May 05, 2012
Richard Kagan
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May 04, 2012
Richard Kagan
Here the deal on Cub's reliever Carlos Marmol. The hard throwing righty is either lights out, or it's All Hands on Deck. Marmol was in the game vs. the Reds to protect a 3-0 lead and a gem of performance by Ryan Dempster. Marmol walked guys, put runners in scoring position and Cincinnati scratched 3 runs to tie the game. They won it on the 10th. Marmol is boring. He doesn't get anyone out. His walk ratio per batters pitched is horrendous. Something like 25% of the guys he has faced, he has walked. You don't have to get a hit off him. Just stand there. When he is on and somedays he is, his slider is unhittable. The thing is with Marmol who don't know which pitcher will show up. The closer or the Blower. He has blown some games that were in the bag. And, that is hard to do. I used to like him. He thought he was going to be great. But, groom someone else for the closer role. Let some other pitcher try his luck. It has to be better than Marmol.
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May 02, 2012
Richard Kagan
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May 01, 2012
Richard Kagan
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April 29, 2012
Joe Anello
And it’s all over! Following a near eight hour session in which we saw rounds four through seven of the NFL Draft, we can finally put a cap on all these selections and start whipping around the league for analysis and impact. Now, as I don’t know as much about these late-rounders as I did the first two days’ worth of players, I won’t run you through too many opinions on their front. Instead I’ll add in my two cents about the draft presentations and coverage. I’ve got OH so many opinions when it comes to that.

-In one of the more interesting moves of the day, the Washington Redskins drafted Michigan State QB Kirk Cousins early in the fourth round. A perplexing move to some of the draft analysts, this pick sent the ‘net into a mini-tizzy as everyone tried to explain the rationale behind bringing in a competent QB to give Robert Griffin III pressure at his back. Cousins has the makings of a quality back-up in the NFL without ever having held a professional clipboard. Still, he was projected by some to have legitimate starting capability. He’s not going to wow you in any of his tape, but he’s an intelligent thrower who has enough arm strength to make nearly every throw. Let’s not get anything confused though. RG3 is the quarterback of the Redskins. Washington is just taking the Philly approach to things. They’ll draft Cousins, use him as a back-up in case Griffin ever gets hurt (which is likely given his play style) and then use his reputation to get assets back in a trade at some point. I get it.
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