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Johnson y Wembanyama guían a Spurs hacia su 4ª victoria ante Thunder, 116-106

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Keldon Johnson anotó 25 puntos, Victor Wembanyama totalizó 22 unidades y 14 rebotes, y los Spurs de San Antonio nunca estuvieron en desventaja el miércoles, para derrotar 116-106 a un Thunder de Oklahoma City diezmado por las lesiones.

Fue la cuarta victoria de San Antonio sobre los campeones vigentes de la NBA en la actual temporada.

De’Aaron Fox sumó 15 puntos y diez asistencias, el novato Carter Bryant igualó su récord de la temporada con 11 tantos y San Antonio ganó su segundo partido consecutivo.

Los Spurs (34-16) se acercaron a cinco duelos del Thunder (40-12), líder de la Conferencia Oeste.

Kenrich Williams anotó 25 puntos y Jaylin Williams agregó 24 unidades y 12 rebotes por Oklahoma City, que contó apenas con ocho jugadores activos.

El Jugador Más Valioso del año pasado, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, se perdió el encuentro debido a una distensión abdominal. El Thunder no contó con toda su alineación titular regular, al jugar por segunda noche consecutiva.

Al final del tercer cuarto, no había nadie más que el personal en el banco, pues el entrenador de Oklahoma City, Mark Daigneault, tenía a sus tres únicos reservas preparándose para ingresar, en momentos en que San Antonio tenía una ventaja de 90-80.

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Deportes AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/johnson-y-wembanyama-guan-a-spurs-hacia-su-4-victoria-ante-thunder-116-106/ 

Posted in News

Presidente de Taiwán dice que la relación con EEUU es “sólido” tras llamada entre Trump y Xi

Por SIMINA MISTREANU

TAIPÉI, Taiwán (AP) — La relación de Taiwán con Estados Unidos es “sólida como una roca”, afirmó el jueves el presidente de la isla, horas después de que Donald Trump y su homólogo chino, Xi Jinping, hablaran por teléfono sobre temas que incluían el futuro de la isla autogobernada.

“La relación entre Taiwán y Estados Unidos es sólida como una roca, y todos los proyectos de cooperación continuarán sin interrupciones”, afirmó el mandatario taiwanés, Lai Ching-te, a reporteros durante una visita a comerciantes textiles en el oeste de Taiwán.

Las declaraciones se produjeron después de que Xi, en su primera llamada con Trump desde noviembre, advirtió al presidente de Estados Unidos que fuera “prudente” al suministrar armas a la isla autogobernada, según un resumen de la conversación ofrecido por el Ministerio de Exteriores de China.

Taiwán es una democracia autogobernada que China reclama como parte de su territorio y sostiene que debe ser anexionada, por la fuerza si fuese necesario. Beijing prohíbe a todos los países con los que tiene relaciones diplomáticas, incluidos Estados Unidos, mantener lazos formales con Taipéi.

Aunque Estados Unidos no reconoce oficialmente a Taiwán como país, es su mayor respaldo informal y proveedor de armas.

En diciembre, el Departamento de Estado estadounidense anunció su mayor paquete de ventas de armas a Taiwán, valorado en más de 11.100 millones de dólares, que incluye misiles, sistemas de artillería y drones. El acuerdo aún debe ser aprobado por el Congreso.

China reaccionó con enfado a la propuesta de ventas de armas y realizó maniobras militares alrededor de la isla durante varios días a finales de diciembre, en los que desplegó unidades aéreas, navales y de misiles.

El partido opositor taiwanés KMT y parte de la población también se oponen a la venta de armas, así como a la propuesta de incrementar el gasto en defensa al 3,3% del producto interno bruto.

El parlamento de Taiwán, que está controlado por la oposición, ha bloqueado el plan presupuestario de Lai, que incluye una partida especial para defensa de 40.000 millones de dólares. En su lugar, propone un gasto en defensa mucho menor.

En una publicación en su red social, Truth Social, el miércoles por la noche, Trump señaló que la llamada con Xi fue “excelente” y “exhaustiva”.

Agregó que está deseando viajar a China en abril, en la que será su primera visita al país en su segundo mandato.

Trump también dijo que China está considerando comprar 20 millones de toneladas de soya estadounidense en la temporada actual, frente a 12 millones de toneladas de la anterior.

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El periodista de video de Associated Press Johnson Lai contribuyó a este despacho.

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Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/presidente-de-taiwn-dice-que-la-relacin-con-eeuu-es-slido-tras-llamada-entre-trump-y-xi/ 

Posted in News

Miguel Andújar y Padres de San Diego pactan por un año y 4 millones, según fuente de AP

Por RONALD BLUM

Miguel Andújar y los Padres de San Diego alcanzaron el miércoles un acuerdo de un año por cuatro millones de dólares, informó a The Associated Press una persona familiarizada con las negociaciones.

La fuente habló bajo condición de anonimato porque el acuerdo estaba sujeto a un examen físico exitoso.

Andújar puede ganar más de 2 millones en bonos por rendimiento. El jardinero devengó un salario de 3 millones el año pasado.

El dominicano, quien cumplirá 30 años el 2 de marzo, bateó para .318 con diez jonrones y 44 carreras impulsadas el año pasado para los Atléticos y Cincinnati, que lo adquirió el 31 de julio a cambio del lanzador derecho de ligas menores Kenya Huggins.

Con nueve años de experiencia en las Grandes Ligas, Andujar tiene un promedio de bateo de .282 con 53 jonrones y 223 carreras impulsadas para los Yankees de Nueva York (2017-22), Pittsburgh (2022-23), los Atléticos (2024-25) y Cincinnati.

Andújar, quien también juega en la tercera base, bateó para .297 con 27 jonrones y 92 carreras impulsadas en 2018, terminando segundo detrás de Shohei Ohtani en la votación para el Novato del Año de la Liga Americana.

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Deportes AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/miguel-andjar-y-padres-de-san-diego-pactan-por-un-ao-y-4-millones-segn-fuente-de-ap/ 

Posted in News

No. 5 Illinois makes 17 3-pointers, beats Northwestern 84-44 for 12th straight win

CHAMPAIGN — Andrej Stojaković scored 17 points and No. 5 Illinois made 17 3-pointers in an 84-44 win over Northwestern on Wednesday night.

Keaton Wagler, Zvonimir Ivišić and Ben Humrichous each had 13 points for Illinois (20-3, 11-1 Big Ten), which won its 12th straight game. David Mirković had 12 points and Tomislav Ivišić had 12 rebounds.

Six players made 3s for Illinois, which shot 17 of 38 from behind the arc and had just two turnovers.

Wagler, whose 19th birthday was Tuesday, has scored in double figures in 15 straight games and 20 times this season.

He banked in a 3 from half court with four seconds left in the first half, giving Illinois a 47-19 lead at halftime.

Northwestern (10-13, 2-10), which shot 29% from the field, including 4 of 25 on 3-pointers, did not have a player score in double figures.

Nick Martinelli, the Big Ten’s leading scorer, had just four points, 19 under his average. He was 2 of 10 from the field while playing 27 minutes. Tre Singleton led the Wildcats with eight points.

The Illini outrebounded Northwestern 50-23. They’ve outrebounded teams in 20 of 23 games, with an 18-2 record in those games.

Illinois has made at least 10 3s in a game 17 times, leading the Big Ten. The Illini are 15-2 in those games.

The Illini have won 10 in a row at home against Northwestern since 2015 and are 76-14 overall against the Wildcats at the State Farm Center.

Illinois beat Northwestern 79-68 in Evanston on Jan. 14, one of five straight losses for the Wildcats at the start of January.

Up next

Northwestern: Plays Sunday at Iowa.

Illinois: Plays Saturday at No. 10 Michigan State.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/illnois-northwestern-basketball-3-pointers/ 

Posted in News

Basketball and local scores for the Southland, Aurora, Elgin, Naperville and Lake County

High school and local college results and highlights from the Southland, Aurora, Elgin, Naperville and Lake County coverage areas.

Email Daily Southtown results to southtownsports@gmail.com, Beacon-News, Courier-News and Naperville Sun results to tribwestsports@gmail.com and News-Sun results to newssunsports@gmail.com.

WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS

HIGH SCHOOLS

BOYS BASKETBALL

Andrew 65, Washington 38

Aurora Central Catholic 71, St. Edward 51

ACC (11-14): Nick Czerak 31 points, 11 rebounds.

Bradley-Bourbonnais 73, Stagg 63

Stagg (12-12, 4-8 SWSC): Petar Zoko 20 points, 5 rebounds. Dovydas Zuperka 19 points.

Harvest-Westminster 56, Lombard Prep 37

Lake Zurich 58, Zion-Benton 39

Sandwich 60, Harvard 34

Sandwich (8-17, 4-6 Kishwaukee River): Brady Behringer 17 points, 6 rebounds.

Southland Prep 61, Uplift 42

Warren 87, Mundelein 30

Warren (22-2, 10-0 North Suburban): Jaxson Davis 20 points.

Waubonsie Valley 47, DeKalb 23

Waukegan 78, Libertyville 68

Waukegan (18-7, 7-3 North Suburban): Rico Love 31 points. Simereon Carter 14 points.

Yorkville Christian 73, Joliet Catholic 58

Yorkville Christian (14-9): Jayden Riley 31 points. Tray Alford 18 points.

JCA (15-8): Jayden Armstrong 24 points. Donavyn Simmons 20 points.

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Antioch 44, Lakes 35

Lakes (9-19, 4-8 Northern Lake County): Gianna Gray 23 points.

Benet 65, Joliet Catholic 49

Burlington Central 67, Dundee-Crown 36

Carmel 43, St. Viator 33

Crete-Monee 66, Rich Township 26

Evergreen Park 63, Richards 27

Evergreen (22-6, 9-2 SSC Red): Tatum Harris 15 points. Grace Kole 13 points.

Grayslake Central 60, Grant 45

Grayslake North 53, North Chicago 25

Hampshire 40, Cary-Grove 37

Hampshire (14-12, 9-5 Fox Valley): Mikala Amegasse 15 points.

Kankakee 62, Thornwood 34

Mendota 55, Somonuak 37

Morgan Park Academy 62, Wolcott 29

Nazareth 44, Marian Catholic 24

Plano 44, Genoa-Kingston 39

Plano (14-13): Cami Nunez 12 points. Chloe Rowe 9 points, 13 rebounds, 6 assists, 3 steals.

Sycamore 48, Kaneland 35

Wauconda 42, Round Lake 39

Yorkville Christian 49, Serena 42

TUESDAY’S RESULTS

HIGH SCHOOLS

BOYS BASKETBALL

Argo 66, Reavis 48

Argo (7-18, 4-7 SSC Red): Darron Greer Jr. 25 points. Joseph Navarez 21 points.

Reavis (7-15, 1-9): Damarion Dixon 21 points.

Bartlett 54, Elgin 43

Bartlett (8-18, 3-7 Upstate Eight West): Brandon Johnson 19 points.

Batavia 64, St. Charles North 52

Bishop McNamara 69, Chicago Christian 45

Brother Rice 43, Lake Forest Academy 40

Brother Rice (17-9): Joe Niego 17 points; GW 3-pointer with :02 remaining. Charlie Wizgird 10 points.

Carmel 54, Highland Park 44

Carmel (9-17): Jackson Stavros 12 points. Ethan Matz 11 points.

Crystal Lake South 63, Burlington Central 60

East Aurora 81, West Chicago 57

Eisenhower 72, Evergreen Park 66

Eisenhower (5-18, 2-8 SSC Red): Larnell Moore 22 points.

Geneva 53, Lake Park 44

Grant 59, Antioch 32

Grayslake Central 72, North Chicago 52

Grayslake Central (19-7, 9-1 Northern Lake County): Carson Woods 18 points. Alex Granville 17 points.

Hampshire 53, Crystal Lake Central 45

Hampshire (8-17, 3-10 Fox Valley): Bradley Boyd 17 points.

Hillcrest 70, Bremen 40

Homewood-Flossmoor 61, Lincoln-Way Central 55

H-F (21-3, 11-1 SWSC): Darrius Hawkins Jr. 24 points, 8 assists, 5 rebounds, 5 steals. Danny Ruffin 10 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists.

Lincoln-Way Central (16-8, 8-4): Nick Brzezniak 21 points. Alex Panos 14 points.

Jacobs 52, Dundee-Crown 41

Jacobs (14-10, 7-6 Fox Valley): Elijah Bell 20 points.

Kaneland 81, Rochelle 52

Kaneland (24-0, 6-0 Interstate Eight): Marshawn Cocroft 20 points. Evan Frieders 19 points. Connor Kimme14 points.

Kankakee 73, Crete-Monee 53

Lake Forest 50, Stevenson 44

Lake Forest (9-15, 3-7 North Suburban): Dominic Mordini 20 points. Rory Haas 14 points.

Stevenson (17-7, 6-3): Donny Williams 16 points, 4 rebounds. Rocco Pagliocca 16 points.

Lakes 76, Round Lake 43

Lakes (13-9, 7-3 Northern Lake County): Ben Newcomb 15 points. Dorian Pullen 11 points.

Lockport 62, Lincoln-Way West 33

Lockport (21-4, 11-2 SWSC): Nojus Venckus 20 points. Nedas Venckus 16 points.

Marian Catholic 44, Christ the King 41

Marian (11-10): Landon Mays 12 points.

Marist 70, Brooks 44

Marist (22-4): Adoni Vassilakis 14 points. Stephen Brown 11 points.

Oak Forest 55, Lemont 53 (OT)

Oak Lawn 64, Shepard 42

Oak Lawn (20-6, 9-2 SSC Red): Omar Saleh 19 points. Marc Harvey 18 points.

Oswego 57, Joliet Central 37

Oswego (17-8, 8-4 Southwest Prairie West): Ethan Vahl 17 points.

Oswego East 64, Plainfield South 52

Plano 56, Marengo 44

Plano (15-10, 8-2 Kishwaukee River): Ethan Taxis 21 points. Kevin Martinez 14 points.

Seneca 64, Beecher 60 (2 OT)

Beecher (4-20): Dom DeFrank 16 points, 5 assists.

St. Laurence 56, Hinsdale South 40

St. Laurence (20-5): Markese Peoples 16 points. Jon Garcia 14 points.

Sandburg 56, Bradley-Bourbonnais 50

Sandburg (17-10, 7-6 SWSC): Will Johnson 16 points. Dan Morakinyo 14 points.

South Elgin 64, Streamwood 30

Stagg 48, Lincoln-Way East 36

Stagg (12-11, 4-7 SWSC): Omar Barakat 21 points, 6 rebounds. Petar Zoko 13 points, 10 rebounds.

T.F. North 76, Tinley Park 52

T.F. North (10-11, 5-5 SSC Blue): Kahari Ali 20 points, 11 rebounds.

Thornwood 66, Thornton 35

Wauconda 67, Grayslake North 51

Wauconda (20-6, 10-0 Northern Lake County): Tony Salemi 22 points, 6 steals, 4 rebounds. Austin Carlsen 19 points.

Grayslake North (9-16, 2-8): Uros Mitrovic 19 points.

West Aurora 54, Larkin 38

West Aurora (15-11, 8-1 Upstate Eight West): Travis Brown 18 points. Jaden Matthew-Thomas 14 points.

Yorkville 56, Plainfield Central 21

Yorkville (13-9, 9-3 Southwest Prairie West): Graham Martinson 14 points.

LITTLE TEN TOURNAMENT

Hinckley-Big Rock 75, LaMoille 34

Hinckley-Big Rock (16-6): Luke Badal 20 points. Marshall Ledbetter 15 points.

Indian Creek 51, Somonauk 27

Indian Creek (16-5): Payton Hueber 14 points.

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Andrew 56, Morris 47

Andrew (15-11): Christa Olson 18 points. Ana Cisek 10 points.

Aurora Christian 31, Hinckley-Big Rock 25

Donovan 34, Illinois Lutheran 21

Evergreen Park 66, Eisenhower 15

Evergreen (21-6, 8-2 SSC Red): Tatum Harris 17 points. Grace Kole 13 points.

Glenbard West 55, St. Charles North 36

St. Charles North (17-7): Lelanie Posada 18 points.

Hillcrest 66, Bremen 16

Homewood-Flossmoor 47, Lincoln-Way Central 33

Johnsburg 57, Plano 20

Lake Zurich 45, Zion-Benton 13

Lemont 36, Oak Forest 33

Libertyville 58, Waukegan 30

Libertyville (20-5, 11-1 North Suburban): Lily Fisher 29 points, 9 rebounds.

Lockport 60, Lincoln-Way West 51

Mundelein 49, Warren 24

Mundelein (18-11, 8-5 North Suburban): Casey Vyverman 20 points.

Naperville Central 73, DeKalb 33

Naperville Central (22-5, 7-1 DuPage Valley): Erin Hackett 30 points, 5 assists. Trinity Jones 18 points, 8 rebounds, 4 steals, 3 blocks.

Naperville North 63, Metea Valley 42

New Trier 57, Highland Park 27

Oak Lawn 63, Shepard 53

Oak Lawn (17-10, 7-4 SSC Red): Kenadie Haubenreiser 17 points, 5 rebounds. Bianca Fleitas 17 points, 7 assists, 5 steals. Liv Perry 14 points, 9 rebounds, 4 steals.

Oswego East 75, Plainfield South 51

Oswego East (13-10, 9-4 Southwest Prairie West): Aubrey Lamberti 20 points. Nicole Warbinski 20 points.

Richards 38, Chicago Christian 31

St. Bede 73, Newark 21

Sandburg 67, Bradley-Bourbonnais 29

Sandburg (13-16, 5-9 SWSC): Aleena Samad 14 points. Zoe Trunk 12 points.

Sandwich 41, Woodstock 39

Stevenson 40, Lake Forest 26

T.F. North 67, Tinley Park 37

T.F. North (18-7, 9-1 SSC Blue): Lauryn Jackson 31 points, 13 rebounds. Kamariyah McClinton 20 points, 11 assists, 9 rebounds.

Vernon Hills 62, Grayslake North 42

Vernon Hills (20-5): Emma Jocson 21 points, 7 rebounds, 6 assists.

Waubonsie Valley 64, Neuqua Valley 54

Waubonsie (26-1, 7-1 DuPage Valley): Danyella Mporokoso 28 points; set program record for most points in a season. Taylnn Heard 18 points. Arie Garcia-Evans 8 assists; became program’s all-time assist leader.

Yorkville 46, Plainfield Central 35

Yorkville (11-12, 5-6 Southwest Prairie West): Ashlyn Peterson 14 points.

GCAC TOURNAMENT

Championship Quarterfinals

Mother McAuley 70, Aurora Central Catholic 62

McAuley (22-5): Taji Alexa 25 points. Quinn Arundel 17 points.

Providence 56, St. Ignatius 45

Providence (26-3): Landrie Callahan 18 points, 8 rebounds. Layken Callahan 12 points.

Loyola 68, St. Laurence 18

Consolation Quarterfinal

Resurrection 51, De La Salle 36

Compiled by Josh Krockey.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/local-scores-southland-aurora-elgin-naperville-lake-county-4/ 

Posted in News

Bucks superan la gran actuación de Trey Murphy III para vencer en tiempo extra a los Pelicans

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Ryan Rollins anotó 27 puntos y los Bucks de Milwaukee resistieron una brillante actuación de Trey Murphy III para vencer el miércoles en tiempo extra 141-137 a los Pelicans de Nueva Orleans.

Murphy anotó un récord personal de 44 unidades y encestó 12 de 19 desde la línea de tres. Sus 12 triples igualaron el quinto total más alto en un solo juego en la historia de la NBA. El récord de triples en un solo juego pertenece a Klay Thompson, quien anotó 14 para Golden State contra Chicago el 29 de octubre de 2018.

Los equipos combinaron para atinar 45 de 93 de sus triples, con Nuevo Orleans encestando 24 de 46 y Milwaukee 21 de 47. Los Bucks lograron un 60,9% de efectividad en tiros de campo, su mejor marca de la temporada.

Los Bucks tomaron la delantera definitiva al anotar los primeros cinco puntos del tiempo extra, con una bandeja en penetración de Rollins y un triple de Myles Turner. Nueva Orleans estaba detrás 139-137 cuando Zion Williamson fue sancionado con una falta ofensiva justo antes de que Saddiq Bey encestara un triple que habría puesto a los Pelicans por delante con 6,5 segundos restantes en el tiempo extra.

Kevin Porter Jr. de Milwaukee luego encestó dos tiros libres con 5,2 segundos restantes. Porter tuvo 18 puntos, nueve asistencias y seis rebotes en su regreso después de perderse seis juegos por una distensión en el oblicuo.

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Deportes AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/bucks-superan-la-gran-actuacin-de-trey-murphy-iii-para-vencer-en-tiempo-extra-a-los-pelicans/ 

Posted in News

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong, told he would never walk again, returns to basketball as 24-year-old freshman

Reggie Strong was crossing a street in Memphis with a big smile on his face, dreaming out loud about hitting a jackpot at a casino and telling his friends he would share the winnings with them.

Then the car came.

A driver ran a red light going 60 mph and crashed into Strong, who broke both legs, suffered torn cartilage and tendons in both knees, required over 300 stitches and nearly had his dominant left hand completely torn off.

Just about everything changed for Strong on that April night in 2023. One thing, remarkably, did not — his sense of optimism.

“I was with my dad when the doctor said, ‘Reggie, you’ll never walk again,’” Strong said. “I looked at my dad and I was like, ‘They must not know who Reggie is. I’m going to go do that.’”

Strong is doing way more than just walking. He’s returned to basketball as a 24-year-old freshman at Moraine Valley, where he’s the team’s leading scorer, averaging 15.5 points.

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong (1) gets ready for practice in Palos Hills on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Troy Stolt / Daily Southtown)

Cyclones coach Kyle Huppe is thrilled his team can be the beneficiary of Strong’s remarkable comeback story.

“He’s so mature and he’s such a great leader for our team,” Huppe said. “He’s been given, essentially, a second lease at life. He knows how fragile life can be and he doesn’t take a single day for granted.”

The road back certainly wasn’t smooth for Strong, a Chicago native who played high school basketball at Farragut, St. Joseph and Orr and briefly moved to Armenia to play after graduating in the middle of the pandemic.

Strong was in Memphis for a men’s league tournament when the accident happened. He remembers waking up in the hospital and thinking it was all a dream.

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong (1) dribbles the ball during practice in Palos Hills on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Troy Stolt / Daily Southtown)

“Until the pain kicked in,” he said. “Then I was like, ‘This is real.’ But I was just thinking, ‘At least I’m still living.’ I’d talk to God and say, ‘You gave me this second chance. I’ll make sure I do it right this time.’”

Strong spent a month in the hospital in Memphis before he was allowed to return home to continue treatment. Eight bolts held his right arm intact. He had a rod in his right leg and nails going through his pelvis and knees.

When his mother, Dianne, who is a nurse, warned him about the dangers of becoming addicted to painkillers, Strong quickly stopped taking them and stuck with Tylenol.

“The pain was unbearable,” he said. “They were rolling me around the hospital in the wheelchair. I was thinking, ‘I might not ever make it out of here.’ I honestly thought I was going to die in there.”

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong (1) takes care of the ball during practice in Palos Hills on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Troy Stolt / Daily Southtown)

But Strong found ways to stay positive.

“I love cars,” he said. “I’d look out the windows at the parking lot and be like, ‘Man, I like that car. I think I’m going to get that one day. If I can drive again, I’ll get that one.’

“A lot of people tell me I’m unrealistic, but I just like to focus on things that make me happy. There are lot of negative things happening in the world, but if you focus on that, you miss your blessing. I figured I’ll just laugh and smile my way through the situation.”

Strong eventually made it home and started his recovery. It was literally one step at a time.

“I remember my dad trying to help me stand up when my mom was recording me trying to take my first step and I almost felt like a baby again,” he said. “It was back to square one.”

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong (1) puts up a shot during practice in Palos Hills on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Troy Stolt / Daily Southtown)

Strong made progress faster than anyone expected but not without some bumps and bruises.

“When I first started running again, I lived on the fourth floor of an apartment building and I’d just fly up the stairs,” he said. “I was walking back down slowly and I fell down the stairs.

“I was like, ‘Wow,’ but it was crazy because it kind of felt good. At one point, I wasn’t able to fall because I was in a wheelchair, so I just walked that one off.”

By summer of 2024, Strong was back in basketball. He trained kids at Shoot 360, a club in Naperville, and joined a men’s team that played some of its games at Moraine Valley.

After being spotted playing by Aaron Green, then an assistant coach for the Cyclones, Strong enrolled at the school and redshirted last season.

This fall, as the season approached, the Cyclones played in a jamboree, featuring half-court scrimmage games with other college teams.

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong (1) pulls up for a shot during practice in Palos Hills on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Troy Stolt / Daily Southtown)

Strong quickly found out how difficult this comeback was still going to be.

“I’m out of the wheelchair and you’re telling me I’ve got to run up and down the court with 18-year-olds?” he said. “It was exhausting. I was dead.

“I told the coaches, ‘I might become a coach. Give me a quarter-zip and I’ll sit on that bench with you.’”

But Strong persevered. The conditioning was the hardest part. The basketball skills were still there.

“It’s all about reps to get back that muscle memory,” he said. “You could tell I could hoop, but I was rusty.”

Huppe saw Strong get back into a groove after about five games.

“I think it was just him gaining the confidence that he could do it again,” Huppe said. “He knows he can play, but he had to prove it to himself.”

Moraine Valley’s Reggie Strong (1) prepares for practice in Palos Hills on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Troy Stolt / Daily Southtown)

Now, Strong envisions a big future.

“I want to go as far as my work ethic takes me,” he said. “I have a really strong work ethic. I want to play Division I then go overseas or go to the G-League, G-League to the NBA, whatever I can do.”

And Strong approaches each day with a new outlook and a total appreciation for a second chance.

“It’s knowing that at any given time, life can be taken away from you,” Strong said. “Just be grateful for what you have.

“If it’s half-cup empty or half-cup full, be half-cup full every time. That will lead you to a full cup.”

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/reggie-strong-moraine-valley-basketball/ 

Posted in News

Qué saber sobre las conversaciones nucleares entre Irán y EEUU en Omán

Por JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, Emiratos Árabes Unidos (AP) — Irán y Estados Unidos sostendrán conversaciones el viernes en Omán, sus más recientes sobre el programa nuclear de Teherán después de que Israel lanzara una guerra de 12 días contra el país en junio y la República Islámica llevara a cabo una sangrienta represión de las protestas efectuadas a nivel nacional.

El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump ha mantenido la presión sobre Teherán, planteando que Washington podría atacar a Irán por el asesinato de manifestantes pacíficos o si el gobierno iraní lleva a cabo ejecuciones masivas debido a las protestas. Mientras tanto, Trump ha vuelto a poner en el centro de atención el programa nuclear iraní después de que la guerra de junio interrumpiera cinco rondas de conversaciones celebradas en Roma y Mascate, Omán, el año pasado.

Trump inició los contactos diplomáticos al escribirle una carta el año pasado al líder supremo de Irán, el ayatolá Alí Jamenei, de 86 años, para dar inicio a estas conversaciones. Jamenei ha advertido que Irán respondería a cualquier ataque con una ofensiva propia, especialmente cuando la teocracia a su mando pasa apuros tras las protestas.

Esto es lo que conviene saber sobre el programa nuclear de Irán y las tensiones que han acechado las relaciones entre Teherán y Washington desde la Revolución Islámica de 1979.

Trump le escribe una carta a Jamenei

Trump le envió la carta a Jamenei el 5 de marzo de 2025, y luego concedió una entrevista televisiva al día siguiente en la que reconoció haberla enviado. Dijo: “Les he escrito una carta diciendo: ‘Espero que vayan a negociar, porque si tenemos que intervenir militarmente, será algo terrible’”.

Desde que regresó a la Casa Blanca, el presidente ha estado presionando para que se lleven a cabo conversaciones, a la vez que incrementa las sanciones y plantea que un ataque militar de Israel o de Estados Unidos podría tener como blanco los sitios nucleares iraníes.

Una carta anterior de Trump durante su primer mandato provocó una respuesta airada del líder supremo.

Pero las misivas de Trump al líder norcoreano Kim Jong Un en su primer mandato derivaron en reuniones cara a cara, aunque no se lograron acuerdos para limitar las bombas atómicas de Pyongyang y un programa de misiles capaz de alcanzar el territorio continental de Estados Unidos.

Omán medió en conversaciones anteriores

Omán, un sultanato en el extremo oriental de la península Arábiga, ha mediado en conversaciones entre el ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Irán, Abbas Araghchi, y el enviado de Estados Unidos para Oriente Medio, Steve Witkoff. Los dos hombres se han reunido cara a cara después de conversaciones indirectas, un hecho poco común debido a las décadas de tensiones entre los países.

Sin embargo, no todo ha sido fácil. En un momento dado, Witkoff hizo una aparición televisiva en la que dejó entrever que un enriquecimiento del 3,67% para Irán podría ser algo en lo que ambos países podrían estar de acuerdo. Pero esos son exactamente los términos establecidos por el acuerdo nuclear de 2015 alcanzado en el gobierno del expresidente Barack Obama, del cual Trump retiró unilateralmente a Estados Unidos. Desde entonces, Witkoff, Trump y otros funcionarios estadounidenses han sostenido que Irán no puede tener ningún enriquecimiento bajo ningún acuerdo, algo con lo que Teherán insiste en que no estará de acuerdo.

Sin embargo, esas negociaciones se interrumpieron cuando Israel entró en guerra en junio contra Irán.

La guerra de 12 días y las protestas a nivel nacional

Ese mes, Israel lanzó lo que se convirtió en una guerra de 12 días contra Irán, la cual incluyó un bombardeo por parte de Estados Unidos de sitios nucleares iraníes. Teherán reconoció más tarde en noviembre que los ataques hicieron que detuviera todo el enriquecimiento de uranio en el país, aunque los inspectores del Organismo Internacional de Energía Atómica (OIEA) no han podido visitar los sitios bombardeados.

Irán pronto experimentó protestas que comenzaron a fines de diciembre debido al desplome de la moneda rial del país. Esas manifestaciones pronto se convirtieron en un movimiento nacional, lo que llevó a Teherán a lanzar una sangrienta represión en la que murieron miles de personas y miles más fueron detenidas.

El programa nuclear de Irán preocupa a Occidente

Irán ha insistido desde hace décadas en que su programa nuclear tiene fines pacíficos. Sin embargo, sus funcionarios amenazan cada vez más con intentar desarrollar un arma nuclear. Ahora Tehrán enriquece uranio a niveles cercanos al 60%, el requerido para crear armas atómicas, el único país en el mundo sin un programa de armas nucleares que lo hace.

Bajo el acuerdo nuclear original de 2015, a Irán se le permitió enriquecer uranio hasta un 3,67% de pureza y mantener reservas de 300 kilogramos (661 libras). El informe más reciente de la OIEA sobre el programa iraní situó sus reservas en unos 9.870 kilogramos (21.760 libras), con una fracción enriquecida al 60%.

Las agencias de inteligencia de Estados Unidos evalúan que Irán aún no ha comenzado un programa de armas, pero ha “realizado actividades que lo posicionan mejor para producir un dispositivo nuclear, si decide hacerlo”. Funcionarios iraníes han amenazado con procurar desarrollar una bomba.

Décadas de tensiones entre Irán y Estados Unidos

Irán fue alguna vez uno de los principales aliados de Estados Unidos en Oriente Medio durante el gobierno del sha Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, quien compró armas militares estadounidenses y permitió que técnicos de la CIA operaran puestos de escucha secretos que monitoreaban a la vecina Unión Soviética. La CIA fomentó un golpe de Estado en 1953 que consolidó el gobierno del sha.

Pero en enero de 1979, el sha, gravemente enfermo de cáncer, huyó de Irán mientras se intensificaban manifestaciones masivas contra su gobierno. Acto seguido siguió la Revolución Islámica, liderada por el gran ayatolá Ruhollah Jomeini, y creó el gobierno teocrático iraní.

Más tarde ese año, estudiantes universitarios invadieron la embajada de Estados Unidos en Teherán para exigir la extradición del sha, y provocaron la crisis de los rehenes de 444 días, en la que las relaciones entre ambos países se suspendieron. En la guerra entre Irán e Irak de la década de 1980, Washington respaldó a Saddam Hussein. En la “Guerra de los buques petroleros” durante ese conflicto, Estados Unidos lanzó una ofensiva de un día que paralizó a Irán en el mar, mientras que posteriormente fuerzas estadounidenses derribaron un avión comercial iraní que los militares dijeron haber confundió con un avión de guerra.

En años posteriores, Irán y Estados Unidos han oscilado entre la enemistad y la diplomacia a regañadientes. Después de la época del sha, las relaciones entre ambos alcanzaron su mejor momento en 2015, cuando Teherán firmó el acuerdo nuclear con varias potencias mundiales. Pero en 2018 Trump retiró unilateralmente a Estados Unidos de ese acuerdo, desatando tensiones en Oriente Medio que persisten hasta hoy.

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The Associated Press recibe apoyo para la cobertura de seguridad nuclear de la Carnegie Corporation de Nueva York y la Outrider Foundation. La AP es la única responsable de todo el contenido.

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Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/qu-saber-sobre-las-conversaciones-nucleares-entre-irn-y-eeuu-en-omn/ 

Posted in News

How Will Key Countries Respond To Washington’s Attempted Restoration Of Unipolarity?

How Will Key Countries Respond To Washington’s Attempted Restoration Of Unipolarity?

Authored by Andrew Korybko,

The US’ new National Security and Defense Strategies, which collectively articulate the “Trump Doctrine”, make clear that the US’ grand strategic goal is to restore its predominant position (unipolarity) over the world.

Unlike during the short-lived unipolar era that followed the end of the Old Cold War, this time the US is explicitly reluctant to embroil itself in overseas conflicts that risk overextending itself, and it’ll also now rely more on its regional partners to share the burden of advancing their shared interests.

China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea are identified as the US’ adversaries, the first of them being described as “the most powerful state relative to us since the 19th century” in the National Defense Strategy, and each must now decide whether to challenge the US, balance it, or bandwagon with it.

To a lesser extent, the same also applies to rising powers like India that have complicated ties with the US.

In reverse order…

India won’t ever challenge the US, but it’s likely to balance and bandwagon instead. The balancing aspect relies principally on Russia for preemptively averting potentially disproportionate economic and military-technical dependence on the US that could be weaponized for coercive purposes.

As for the bandwagoning aspect, this concerns India’s sincere interest in complying with its new trade deal with the US and reaching more defense ones with it too, though conditional on the first not being exploited by the US to flood its market and the second not requiring basing US troops on its soil.

By contrast, North Korea is unlikely to ever bandwagon with the US.

It would instead prefer to balance it by triangulating between China and Russia (to avoid disproportionate dependence on either) while at times challenging it through military tests in response to the US’ regional moves.

Iran’s approach will probably continue to apply all three policies:

challenging the US in West Asia;

balancing it by triangulating between China and Russia;

and negotiating a new nuclear deal for bandwagoning with it one day.

Russia has been pursuing the same under Trump 2.0: its development of strategic arms challenges the US’ restoration of unipolarity; triangulating between China and India (to avoid disproportionate dependence on either) balances the US; and ongoing talks seek to reach an accommodation with it. China is no different: its own military build-up also challenges the restoration of unipolarity; its BRI partners help it to balance the US; and ongoing trade talks seek to reach an accommodation with it too.

From the US’ grand strategic perspective due to how it views China as “the most powerful state relative to us since the 19th century”, it’s expected to offer comparatively better partnership terms to India and Russia for incentivizing them to relatively distance themselves from China.

Iran will be subordinated one way or another in order for the US to control its resource flows to China, North Korea will remain contained, and China will be coerced into a lopsided trade deal for derailing its superpower trajectory.

As the saying goes, “the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry”, so the aforesaid approach might not be implemented in full.

In fact, it could also backfire if China feels like it’s being pressured into an Imperial Japanese-like 1941 zero-sum dilemma of subordinating itself to the US or initiating a war out of desperation to avert that worst-case scenario, which is precisely what the US wants to avoid.

The US’ restoration of unipolarity therefore risks sparking the next World War if cooler heads don’t prevail.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 02/04/2026 – 23:25

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/how-will-key-countries-respond-washingtons-attempted-restoration-unipolarity 

Posted in News

Chicago Blackhawks share their Olympic break mindset after a shutout loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The NHL’s roster freeze went into effect Wednesday afternoon, but not before forward Artemi Panarin — 2015-16 Calder Trophy winner with the Chicago Blackhawks — was traded from the New York Rangers to the Los Angeles Kings. It was a bombshell move right before the NHL halts its schedule for the Olympics.

Fans will get one more day of marquee NHL action on Thursday. The impressive Pittsburgh Penguins will meet the red-hot Buffalo Sabres, the New York Islanders and New Jersey Devils will meet in a short-travel battle and the chance of fighting is high in the Sunshine State rivalry between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Florida Panthers.

Then it all stops — in America, at least. The action will move to Milan, Italy.

It’s been a grueling January for the entire NHL as the league jam-packed the first month of 2026 to accommodate the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. The Hawks played 16 games last month, with four separate back-to-backs.

The Hawks visited the Columbus Blue Jackets for the second time in five days after a 4-2 loss in Chicago on Jan. 30. The Blue Jackets came into Wednesday’s game winners of the past six, including a road win in New Jersey 24 hours prior.

Ryan Donato took a hit in the first period that left him sprawled on the ice, staring a hole through the referee. He laid a frustration hit on left winger Mason Marchment and defenseman Ivan Provorov scored in the chaos.

Ryan Donato of the Chicago Blackhawks passes the puck against Cole Sillinger of the Columbus Blue Jackets during the first period at Nationwide Arena on Feb. 4, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (Jason Mowry/Getty Images)

Hawks blueliner Wyatt Kaiser was injured and helped off the ice after defenseman Zach Werenski — who opened the goal scoring and Columbus cannon firing — fell on his leg. Kaiser was quickly ruled out for the rest of the game and his status is to be determined heading into the break.

Ohio’s NHL team cruised to its seventh straight win and will look to keep that momentum come their next game on Feb. 26 in Boston. The Hawks … well. It’ll be nice to take a break from the pressure for a few weeks.

“I’m viewing the break to see how long it takes for the family to get sick of me, because that generally happens,” Hawks coach Jeff Blashill said. “It’s been a grind of a schedule right now, so certainly we’ll take advantage of that.”

The Hawks are 22-26-9 after a 4-0 loss to the Blue Jackets on Wednesday. The shutout is their sixth defeat in seven games.

Connor Bedard found his post-injury stride despite a quiet Columbus game. Upon return from the break, it is presumed he will be at full strength and back to his pre-injury self.

“The plan when he gets back is to start taking faceoffs, when you’re not taking faceoffs ever, it puts you on the wall a lot,” Blashill said of Bedard. “I know he’s healthy enough to play, and so at that point, you’re 100% if you’re out there playing.”

Others are hoping for revitalization upon their return. The Hawks aren’t in a playoff spot right now, so that automatically means there’s work to be done upon returning.

The step back from the ice can kickstart that process.

“It’s a great opportunity for us to rebuild our foundation and fundamentals, both individually and as a team,” Blashill said.

Artyom Levshunov has been a healthy scratch for the past three games as he takes part in a “program” to touch up on his two-way game. Blashill is looking for him to improve in three areas: shooting technique, defensive positioning and footwork, and “delivering the puck in the right spot.”

The defenseman will spend some time practicing in Florida during the Olympic break, where he also spends his summers. He has two goals and 19 assists on the season.

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“To say that we have a miracle cure on in two days is not a reality,” Blashill said on Tuesday. “This is something that’s really going to build through when we come back as much as we can over the course of the last month in time, and certainly this summer, it’s going to be huge.”

On the other hand, some players will take some time to clear their heads before returning. The number of skaters who will take that path, though, may have gone down after Columbus cruised past them.

“I’d rather after that one to be playing tomorrow night, (but) I think (the break), it’s good for everybody,” said Nick Foligno, the Hawks’ current captain and former Blue Jackets captain from 2015-21. “I think it’s important if we use it wisely, and we’ll come back with a ton of energy and make sure we have a good push here, and use the practice time that we have to get better.”

The team will be together in cheering on their lone Olympian, Teuvo Teräväinen. The 31-year-old will have infinite Hawks support as he flies to Milan to play for Finland.

“We have one player that will be in the Olympics, so we’ll have the majority of our team together,” Blashill said. “So, that’s a pretty unique opportunity.”

Added Teräväinen: “Everybody’s cheering for me, so I’m happy about that. A lot of other good teammates here and they’re cheering for me.”

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/04/chicago-blackhawks-olympic-break-columbus/