Category: 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.
MONDAY’S RESULTS
HIGH SCHOOLS
BOYS BASKETBALL
Clifton Central 64, Beecher 54
Beecher (4-19, 4-5 River Valley): Wences Baumgartner 16 points, 4 rebounds.
East Aurora 63, Aurora Central Catholic 61
Grayslake Central 61, Vernon Hills 56 (OT)
Grayslake Central (18-7): Carson Woods 14 points. Cole Halverson 13 points. Alex Granville 12 points.
Vernon Hills (18-8): Graham Lis 15 points. Daniel Odhiambo 13 points.
Leo 72, IC Catholic 61
Leo (18-4, 6-0 CCL White): Karon Shavers 20 points. Jeremiah Echols 14 points.
Lockport 65, Joliet Central 34
Lockport (20-4): Trace Schaaf 16 points, 7 rebounds. Nojus Venckus 12 points. First 20-win season since 2010.
Morgan Park Academy 75, Christian Heritage 51
Oak Forest 58, Andrew 48
Oak Forest (18-8): Neiko LeFlore 15 points. Gary Manso 14 points. Aiden Barnett 14 points.
Andrew (10-15): Ryan Dinnon 16 points, 8 rebounds.
Rich Township 73, Bloom 66
Richards 63, Ag. Science 38
Schaumburg Christian 69, Harvest-Westminster 45
Harvest-Westminster (9-14, 4-3 Northeastern Athletic): Nate Foster 17 points.
U-High 70, Tinley Park 46
Wauconda 85, Woodstock North 49
Wauconda (19-6): Alex Ortega 25 points, 7 rebounds, 5 assists, 4 steals. Austin Carlsen 19 points, 7 rebounds.
Wheaton St. Francis 50, Marmion 48
CHICAGO PUBLIC LEAGUE SOUTH TOURNAMENT
Morgan Park 63, Julian 56
LITTLE TEN TOURNAMENT
IMSA 60, Serena 38
IMSA (12-6): Omar Njikam 15 points.
Newark 51, Leland 35
Newark (14-10): Reggie Chapman 20 points, 7 assists. Cody Kulbartz 13 points, 8 rebounds, 4 blocks.
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Beecher 53, Momence 22
Beecher (15-11): Aubrey Tiltges 11 points. Allie Johnson 11 points.
Burlington Central 48, Crystal Lake South 33
Dixon 58, Yorkville Christian 31
Gardner-South Wilmington 50, Illinois Lutheran 16
Grant 77, Willows 62
Grant (13-11): Aubrey Lehner 15 points. Sophie Connealy 14 points.
Hampshire 55, Crystal Lake Central 23
Hampshire (13-12, 8-5 Fox Valley): Peyton McCarthy 14 points. Mikala Amegasse 13 points.
Jacobs 50, Dundee-Crown 42
Kaneland 59, Bartlett 25
Kankakee 42, Morgan Park 36
Lake Forest 38, Warren 20
Lakes 44, Deerfield 38
Lakes (9-18): Gianna Gray 19 points.
Lincoln-Way East 49, Andrew 46
Maine South 58, Benet 30
Marengo 54, Antioch 50
Parkview Christian 66, Hinckley-Big Rock 22
Round Lake 51, Zion-Benton 33
Seneca 60, Newark 15
Streator Midland 56, Indian Creek 35
Indian Creek (12-11): Gretta Oziah 14 points.
T.F. South 69, Joliet West 29
GCAC TOURNAMENT
Aurora Central Catholic 55, Montini 46
Providence 66, De La Salle 37
Providence (25-3): Landrie Callahan 21 points. Taylor Healy 17 points. Layken Callahan 16 points.
St. Laurence 63, Fenwick 60
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
HIGH SCHOOLS
BOYS BASKETBALL
CONFERENCE CHALLENGE CLASSIC
At North Park University
Antioch 56, Rochelle Zell 28
Antioch (5-19): Mark Render 18 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists.
Warren 75, Perspectives MSA 36
Warren (21-2): Jaxson Davis 12 points.
OAK LAWN SUPER SUNDAY SHOWCASE
Brother Rice 62, Lemont 43
De La Salle 52, Lane 48 (OT)
Oak Lawn 69, Marian Catholic 55
Oak Lawn (19-6): Marc Harvey 26 points. Jack Dempsey 16 points.
Marian (10-10): Shane Lunford 14 points.
Kankakee 69, Mount Carmel 60
Mount Carmel (16-8): D.K. Heard 19 points. Ronald Johnson 13 points.
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
HIGH SCHOOLS
BOYS BASKETBALL
Aurora Christian 63, St. Edward 27
Downers Grove South 64, West Aurora 62
West Aurora (14-11): Travis Brown 25 points.
Elk Grove 67, North Chicago 57
Fremd 59, South Elgin 37
Hinsdale Central 64, Bartlett 50
Jacobs 52, Hampshire 49
Jacobs (13-10, 6-6 Fox Valley): Elijah Bell 22 points.
Hampshire (7-17, 2-10): Trey Simmons 13 points.
Lake Zurich 51, Glenbrook North 42
Libertyville 52, Carmel 41
Carmel (8-17): Evan Matz 23 points.
Marist 89, Dyett 48
Naperville North 65, Eisenhower 35
Oswego 81, Oak Park-River Forest 51
Oswego (16-8): Ethan Vahl 33 points, 8 assists, 7 rebounds, 4 steals. Brayden Borrowman 18 points, 9 rebounds.
Ottawa 60, Marmion 55
Marmion (14-10): Ben Piekarz 19 points.
Palatine 66, Wauconda 54
Wauconda (18-6): Tony Salemi 17 points. Austin Carlsen 15 points.
Sandburg 64, Argo 59
Sandburg (16-10): Will Johnson 24 points. Will Hooks 13 points.
Argo (6-18): Darron Greer Jr. 23 points.
Timothy Christian 55, Southland Prep 44
Vernon Hills 64, Grayslake North 44
Vernon Hills (18-7): Jeremy Zamost 33 points, 10 assists. Daniel Odhiambo 17 points, 13 rebounds.
Waubonsie Valley 52, Quincy 44
Waubonsie (14-8): T.J. Adams 17 points. Kris Mporokoso 16 points.
BEECHER JOSH BAUMGARTNER SHOOTOUT
Ag. Science 65, Rantoul 28
Ag. Science (5-17): Bobby White 31 points.
Joliet Catholic 93, Pontiac 46
JCA (15-7): Jayden Armstrong 31 points, 8 rebounds, 6 assists. Donavyn Simmons 18 points, 5 assists.
Armstrong 64, Beecher 57
Normal U-High 65, Marian Catholic 36
EAST AURORA ERNIE KIVISTO HOOPS FEST
Geneva 84, East Aurora 73
Yorkville 64, St. Charles North 60 (OT)
EVANSTON WAR ON THE SHORE SHOOTOUT
Homewood-Flossmoor 66, Loyola 61
H-F (20-3): Marvin Douglas 22 points, 8 rebounds. Danny Ruffin 15 points. Jeff Cade II 14 points.
GLENBROOK SOUTH HOOPS AGAINST HATE SHOOTOUT
Benet 74, DeSmet Jesuit (Ohio) 50
Benet (25-1): Jayden Wright 21 points. Colin Stack 13 points.
Deerfield 46, Lake Forest 43
Deerfield (16-8): Jake Pollack 17 points. Evan Nagler 17 points.
Lake Forest (8-15): Dominic Mordini 19 points.
Neuqua Valley 68, Hersey 65
Neuqua (24-1): Mason Martin 34 points. Cole Kelly 11 points. Luke Balgro 11 points.
KANELAND KRISTINA COLOMBE HOOPS FOR A CURE SHOOTOUT
Kaneland 86, Coal City 33
Kaneland (23-0): Marshawn Cocroft 18 points. Connor Kimme 17 points.
Rockford Guilford 63, Metea Valley 60
LINCOLN-WAY WEST WARRIOR SHOWDOWN
Lincoln-Way East 42, Oak Forest 40
Lincoln-Way West 76, T.F. South 72
Lincoln-Way West (13-13): Drake Been 28 points.
Oswego East 55, Lincoln-Way Central 45
Lincoln-Way Central (16-7): Nick Brzezniak 21 points.
Joliet West 58, Lemont 45
Lemont (14-9): Julian Overton 14 points.
ST. PATRICK SHAMROCK SHOOTOUT
Waukegan 74, Glenbard West 60
Waukegan (17-7): Rico Love 20 points. Simereon Carter 19 points.
WISCONSIN VS. ILLINOIS BORDER BATTLE
At The Prairie School (Wis.)
Warren 83, Racine Lutheran (Wis.) 75
Warren (20-2): Jaxson Davis 26 points. Braylon Walker 24 points.
West DePere (Wis.) 84, Yorkville Christian 69
Yorkville Christian (13-9): Jayden Riley 24 points.
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Benet 47, Marian Catholic 32
Benet (21-2, 9-1 ESCC): Emma Briggs 21 points.
Marian (9-16, 1-9): Ty Jackson 14 points.
Buffalo Grove 42, Lake Zurich 39
Burlington Central 77, Prairie Ridge 36
Burlington Central (17-8, 11-2 Fox Valley): Scarlett LaFleur 24 points. Julia Scheuer 19 points.
Fremd 83, Naperville Central 71
Naperville Central (21-5): Trinity Jones 28 points, 9 rebounds. Erin Hackett 23 points, 9 rebounds, 4 assists.
Grayslake Central 63, Antioch 31
Grayslake Central (15-9, 10-1 Northern Lake County): Peyton Hoffmann 28 points, 8 rebounds.
Grayslake North 56, Round Lake 34
Lakes 53, North Chicago 16
Lakes (8-18, 4-7 Northern Lake County): Natalie Daugherty 14 points, 4 rebounds.
Loyola 65, Mother McAuley 42
McAuley (20-6): Taji Alexa 15 points. Quinn Arundel 13 points, 5 rebounds.
Lyons 44, Lincoln-Way Central 26
Marist 57, St. Viator 42
Nazareth 50, Carmel 42
Carmel (18-8, 6-3 ESCC): Josie Hartman 19 points, 4 rebounds. Liv Johnson 14 points, 8 rebounds.
Oswego 45, Metea Valley 36
Prairie Ridge 57, Burlington Central 21
St. Edward 52, Aurora Christian 15
St. Laurence 57, Shepard 23
Sandburg 64, Rich Township 32
Sandburg (12-16): Zoe Trunk 13 points.
Warren 48, Elk Grove 36
Waubonsie Valley 75, Oswego 41
Waubonsie (25-1): Danyella Mporokoso 32 points. Maya Pereda 21 points.
Wauconda 46, Grant 33
Wauconda (21-1, 11-0 Northern Lake County): Avery Geoghan 14 points, 7 rebounds. Alessandra Rodriguez 10 points, 4 rebounds.
Woodstock 53, Plano 38
Yorkville Christian 55, Harvest-Westminster 28
KANELAND KRISTINA COLOMBE HOOPS FOR A CURE SHOOTOUT
Byron 48, Batavia 32
Genoa-Kingston 50, Kaneland 44
BOYS BOWLING
STATE FINALS
At St. Clair Bowl, Fairview Heights
Local teams: 2. Lockport 12,733, 8. Lincoln-Way West 12,353, 10. Oak Lawn 12,236.
Top local individuals: 3. Austin LiCausi, Lockport, 2,710; 8. Dylan Wastag, Grant, 2,653; 10. (tie) Charlie Dell, Oak Lawn, 2,632; 12. Patrick Berlin, Lincoln-Way West, 2,627; 13. Daniel Ziolkowski, Bloom, 2,613; 18. Nathan Cantrall, Lockport, 2,585; 20. Ian Rottersman, Naperville Central, 2,578.
Compiled by Josh Krockey.
It’s Time To Accept That Civil War 2.0 Has Already Started
It’s Time To Accept That Civil War 2.0 Has Already Started
Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us,
In July of 1917 as the fires of WWI raged across Europe, the Russian city of Petrograd was facing its own special turmoil in the form of a large scale Bolshevik insurgency. Up to 500,000 protesters, agitators and provocateurs had entered the city from across the country, many of them armed. They took over large swaths of the metropolis, hijacked private vehicles and confiscated private buildings.
Some soviet leaders including Vladimir Lenin called the event “premature” and did not publicly endorse it, which may have been a calculated attempt to avoid direct blowback. The official historical explanation is that the insurrection had taken on a life of its own, but the stage had been set and the communist agitators got exactly what they wanted, what their strategy demanded:
Human sacrifice.
Clashes with government authorities led to hundreds of protester deaths and a handful of police casualties. The Russian government surged military forces into the region to arrest Bolshevik captains and the movement had to pull back. In the end, though, the primary goal of the insurgents had been achieved. Whether spontaneous or planned, the point of the communist methodology is always to trigger government violence which can then be used to create public sympathy and bolster the revolution.
The majority of “normies” don’t need to join the revolution, they just have to be convinced to stay out of the way. And that’s largely what happened a few months later in October of 1917 when the Red Terror began. What followed was five years of civil war.
The communists, who had long claimed to be innocent victims of the Tsarist “imperialism”, went on a murder spree as soon as they solidified their political power. Their ideological opponents were systematically rounded up and eliminated. There are no exact numbers on how many killings occurred because records were destroyed, but estimates suggest the revolutionaries and secret police arrested and executed around 1 million political dissidents in the first few years of communist rule.
This genocide, though, would pale in comparison to the 10 million deaths caused by the Russian Civil War. Not to mention the imprisonment and mass murder of millions of Christians by the atheist regime over the course of the next couple decades.
History rarely “repeats” but our modern political dynamic rings rather familiar. Many of the tactics used by the leftists in Russia in the early 20th Century are being used today in the US. In fact, I would argue they are almost exactly the same and that a Bolshevik-style revolution is happening right now.
Interestingly, the Bolsheviks were a tiny minority within the Russian population. At their peak in 1917 they had only 400,000 “official” members. They were supported politically by an estimated 23% of the population, but that is still a small movement compared to the 150 million Russian citizens trying to live their lives from day to day.
Had Russian conservatives (nationalists, Christians and defenders of private property rights) stood up and acted en masse to stop the Bolsheviks early in 1917, their society could have avoided the full scale murder that would befall them from 1918 onward. They might not have aligned perfectly with their existing government, but the communist alternative was so much worse.
Instead, the conservatives waited until agents of the Cheka were at their doorstep, and by that time it was too late to effectively fight back. As Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn depressingly noted in his book “The Gulag Archipelago”, the majority of Russians stood against Soviet rule but they did not have the courage to take up arms when it mattered most. And so, a minority of militant communists were able to dominate a nation of hundreds of millions. As Solzhenitsyn warned:
“We didn’t love freedom enough. And even more – we had no awareness of the real situation…We purely and simply deserved everything that happened afterward.”
The communists, of course, did not achieve such success alone. As scholar Antony Sutton outlined with ample evidence in his book “Wall Street And The Bolshevik Revolution”, they enjoyed the financial and logistical backing of various global elites (from the Rockefellers to the Morgans to the Harrimans) through the course of the revolution and after their rise to power.
The purpose? To create the model for an atheist and relativistic authoritarian state. A system that the globalists intend to one day use to take over the entire world.
Their plan relies heavily on a lack of action by patriots. It could be a weakness, but the leftists have good reason to feel emboldened lately.
Civil War 2.0 has, in fact, already kicked off in the form of a well funded far-left insurrection much like what happened in 1917 Russia.
The lack of conservative organization in response has been less than impressive, and I’m here to give a warning: We are approaching the point of no return.
Activists are funded by a massive shell game of NGOs hidden behind other NGOs. They are coordinated by hidden online discord servers. They receive their orders and share information in the field through encrypted Signal chats. They are trained in agitation and disruption by anonymous online meet-ups run by covert activist coordinators. They have engaged in violent attacks on ICE agents on hundreds if not thousands of occasions and few of them are ever prosecuted. This is not the behavior of a grassroots protest movement, this is the behavior of an army of covert operatives with special protections.
It’s important to understand that the “protests” are actually a highly coordinated guerrilla campaign – These are not sincere citizens exercising their civil rights. For now their stated motivation is to stop deportations of illegal migrants, but this is just an excuse for their insurgency. If ICE stopped operations tomorrow, the paid activists would simply fabricate another rationale for tearing the country apart. Placating them will accomplish nothing.
They are hostile combatants trying to assert dominance and grow their numbers through posturing. Their goal is the destruction of the western world. This cannot be allowed.
The clear solution would be for the government to shut down hostile NGOs, however, these institutions are protected by corporate personhood and have the same constitutional rights as individual citizens. The process of investigating them and prosecuting them takes time – time we don’t have.
Even if Trump utilized the Insurrection Act and deployed the military, there are not enough troops to lock down more than a handful of US cities. Those people hoping that martial law will resolve the issue are kidding themselves. By extension, leftists stand to gain greater support: Martial law would represent proof to the rest of the world that the administration is indeed “fascist.”
The course of the war will not depend on government intervention, so don’t hold your breath waiting for effective enforcement. The reality is, most activist arrests end with them right back out on the street anyway. Their support apparatus has to be permanently removed, or THEY have to be permanently removed from the equation.
Everything will be decided by regular conservatives. If they organize in large numbers, if they create a funding apparatus to move people and supplies around the country quickly, and if they form proper leadership and training guidelines, then there might be a chance for peace simply by presenting a formidable deterrent. If not, at least the means to put down the insurgency will be available.
If conservatives stay at home and refuse to protect any piece of territory beyond their front gate, they will lose everything. It’s inevitable. The side that wants to win will always have an edge over the side that “just wants to be left alone.”
Protests will continue to spread to other cities using the same model we have seen recently in Minneapolis. NGOs will try to provoke more activist deaths at the hands of federal agents. The more the activists go unchecked by the general public the more emboldened they will become and the more their numbers will grow in the assumption that they are the majority.
In the event that the protests are stalled but the organizations are not crushed, activists will revert to assassinations and Weather Underground-style terror attacks until they demoralize the populace and gather strength again. The bottom line? If the political left is not made to truly FEAR consequences, they will not stop until they get their own Red Terror purge.
The end result is not going to be “balkanization.” That idea might have worked during the pandemic, but at this stage it’s far too late for a national divorce. The leftists will never allow conservatives to live in peace in red states. Letting blue cities rule over entire states of mostly red counties would only legitimize progressive extremists and hurt the conservative cause. This fight is for the entire country, not pieces of it.
It’s also not going to be a war of “factions”. This is prepper SHTF theory nonsense. The lines could not be more defined. The “false left/right paradigm” is a dead remnant of the Ron Paul era. It no longer exists, at least not where the bottom of the pyramid is concerned. The vast majority of progressives and Democrats are onboard with woke extremism. They’re onboard with the purge. They are loyal soldiers of globalism. Unity with them means enslavement.
Leftists, globalists and their allies are not going to discern between MAGA, libertarians and centrists. They will ultimately treat everyone as an enemy worthy of elimination.
They’re also not going to divide and in-fight the way some conservatives predict, at least not until they’ve gotten rid of us first.
In the end, the fate of the US and western civilization stands on the precarious shoulders of a conservative movement that has the means to fight, but not necessarily the will. They are forever waiting for the perfect Hollywood scenario in which they can defend themselves in good conscience in a fair fight where they are the clear and undeniable “good guy.” They are forever waiting for the perfect moment to rise up – A moment that will never come.
Patriots have also planned and trained for decades under the pretenses that conservatives would be the insurgents, not the counter-insurgency. Counter-insurgency is much more difficult and requires far more resources. But guess what? You don’t always get to choose the wars you fight. Sometimes the war chooses you and you have to adapt.
There are certainly individuals who will do what they can. I will be among them as will many of the people I know.
But the great question, the great unknown, the unpredictable factor is whether or not average Americans will step off their porches in large numbers and send a clear message that they will no longer tolerate the chaos.
* * *
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Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/02/2026 – 23:25
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/its-time-accept-civil-war-20-has-already-started
Navegantes aplastan a Caribes y se coronan en Venezuela
Por The Associated Press
Los Navegantes del Magallanes se apoyaron en una explosiva actuación ofensiva de Rougner Odor para aplastar el lunes 14-6 a los Caribes de Anzoátegui, conquistar la Serie Final en seis juegos y proclamarse campeones de la Liga Venezolana de Béisbol Profesional.
El Magallanes, el club más longevo del béisbol venezolano —fundado en 1917—, obtuvo así el gallardete número 14 de su historia y el primero desde la temporada 2021-22.
Odor, exjugador de las Grandes Ligas, lideró el ataque al batear de 5-4, con un doble, un jonrón y cinco carreras impulsadas. Renato Núñez aportó un cuadrangular y dos remolcadas al irse de 3-1, mientras que Wilfredo Tovar conectó de 3-3, anotó tres veces y empujó una carrera.
La temporada de la LVBP se retrasó debido a conflictos políticos en el país y concluyó por primera vez en el mes de febrero. No obstante, el equipo campeón ya había definido que no participaría en la Serie del Caribe 2026, que se celebra en México, tras una decisión de la liga luego de que la Confederación de Ligas Profesionales de Béisbol del Caribe retirara la sede a Caracas.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/02/navegantes-aplastan-a-caribes-y-se-coronan-en-venezuela/
Even off the bench, Olivia King reigns supreme as Lincoln-Way East earns win over Andrew. ‘Keep it going.’
Lincoln-Way East’s Olivia King patiently waits her turn on the bench.
Lately, when she’s called upon, the 5-foot-11 junior guard delivers the goods.
“I try to focus in before I get in the game,” she said. “When I get in, I try to do the best that I can and I don’t worry about making little mistakes.”
There hasn’t been much to worry about recently with King, who came off the bench at the start of the second quarter Monday night and scored a quick basket.
She went on to lead a balanced scoring attack with 10 points in helping the host Griffins pull off a 49-46 SouthWest Suburban Conference victory over Andrew in Frankfort.
In the fourth, King started the quarter with a big assist and then blocked a shot with 2:26 left. it came after she led the Griffins off the bench with 16 points on Jan. 27 in a 42-29 win over Sandburg.
Lincoln-Way East’s Olivia King (5) gets fouled by Andrew’s Makayla Terry (13) as she goes up for a shot during a SouthWest Suburban Conference game in Frankfort on Monday, Feb. 2, 2026. (Steve Johnston / Daily Southtown)
“Olivia has been coming on strong, and she can do a lot of things for us,” Lincoln-Way East coach Jim Nair said. “She really knows how to move without the basketball.
“She can pass, she can take the ball to the basket and she has an outside shot.”
Kennedy Johnson and Ellie Guyette each scored nine points for the Griffins (16-11, 6-6). Johnson notched eight of her 12 rebounds in the first quarter and added two blocked shots. Kaitlyn Dykstra scored all eight of her points in the fourth, including five free throws in the final 58 seconds.
Ana Cisek led Andrew (14-11, 6-6) with 18 points on the strength of four 4-pointers. Christa Olson scored all 12 of her points in the second half and also tallied seven rebounds and three steals.
Lincoln-Way East’s Emerson Nilsson (3) heads toward the basket as Andrew’s Bree Milazzo (32) defends during a SouthWest Suburban Conference game in Frankfort on Monday, Feb. 2, 2026. (Steve Johnston / Daily Southtown)
King, meanwhile, has been key during this stretch for the Griffins, who are 6-2 since Jan. 10.
“I love having ‘Liv’ on my team,” Johnson said of King. “She’s always there. She knows when to drive baseline and she knows when to take the shot.
“She has really good footwork, and it’s just awesome having her on the team.”
Johnson’s big rebounding performance in the first eight minutes highlighted a low-scoring quarter that left the two teams staring at a 6-6 draw.
Lincoln-Way East’s Kennedy Johnson (33) and Andrew’s Charlotte Gallivan (3) battle for a loose ball during a SouthWest Suburban Conference game in Frankfort on Monday, Feb. 2, 2026. (Steve Johnston / Daily Southtown)
“It was a slow first quarter and shots weren’t hitting,” Johnson said. “So, I knew I had to be more aggressive on the boards. I knew I had to get them so we could get a second chance.”
King pointed out that she started playing basketball in fourth grade. King and teammate Emerson Nilsson played in the Oaks Fitness and Recreation League in Mokena.
“Some of my best friends decided to do it together,” King said. “I tried other sports. I played golf and I liked it, but I wanted to focus on basketball this year and keep it going.”
Monday’s game started on an emotional note. It was senior night, with the two teams allowing Cisek and Lincoln-Way East senior Madison Zaremba to score uncontested baskets.
Andrew’s Christa Olson (1) tries to grab a rebound from Lincoln-Way East’s Olivia King (5) and Maddie Kelly (43) in a SouthWest Suburban Conference game in Frankfort on Monday, Feb. 2, 2026. (Steve Johnston / Daily Southtown)
Zaremba, who missed the regular season with a knee injury, tearfully hugged her teammates after making the layup.
“She was hurt in June and has been working her butt off to try to get back,” Johnson said of Zaremba. “We’re all very proud of her because she’s always the first one here, even if she is not able to get on the court.”
“Madison is one of the best defensive players to come through our program,” Nair said. “She was able to get into the books. It’s a moment she will always remember, and we appreciate all she has done for the program.”
King confirmed it was a special moment for the team.
“I’m very happy for her,” King said of Zaremba.
Jeff Vorva is a freelance reporter for the Daily Southtown.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/02/olivia-king-lincoln-way-east-basketball/
Former Chicago White Sox All-Star outfielder Avisaíl García announces his retirement
MIAMI — Avisaíl García announced his retirement Monday following 13 major-league seasons, including six with the Chicago White Sox and his final three with the Miami Marlins.
García, 34, did not play again after being designated for assignment by the Marlins on June 4, 2024. The outfielder signed a $53 million, four-year deal as a free agent in December 2021, but couldn’t match the production he enjoyed with Milwaukee in 2021, when he hit .262 and set career highs with 29 home runs and 86 RBIs.
García, a native of Venezuela, had multiple stints on the injured list in his three seasons with the Marlins. He hit .185 in only 37 games in 2023 and .240 in 18 games before his release the following year. He missed the 2025 season.
In announcing his retirement on social media, García wrote: “Thank you to God for the blessing of fulfilling my childhood dream — of playing baseball at its highest level. To my family: my eternal gratitude for your unconditional love, constant support, and sacrifices that made every step of this journey possible.”
He made the American League All-Star team as a member of the White Sox in 2017, when he hit .330 with 18 home runs and 80 RBIs.
García made his major-league debut with Detroit in 2012. In 2013, he was part of the three-team trade in which Jake Peavy was sent to the Boston Red Sox.
He signed as a free agent with the Tampa Bay Rays following the 2018 season. For his career, García batted .263 with 140 home runs and a .733 OPS.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/02/chicago-white-sox-all-star-avisail-garcia-retirement/
Watch: Russian Soldiers Surrender To Gun-Wielding Robot; Humanoid Warfare Nears
Watch: Russian Soldiers Surrender To Gun-Wielding Robot; Humanoid Warfare Nears
Video footage circulating on X from the Ukrainian front shows a Droid TW-7.62 ground robotic system, roughly half the size of a Mini Cooper, forcing the surrender of three Russian troops during an active military operation. The incident suggests that war robots are rapidly maturing, moving beyond support and logistics into offensive roles.
Futurism reports that Ukrainian defense robotics firm DevDroid’s armed unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) forced the surrender of three Russian soldiers.
“The footage shows three Russian soldiers approaching one by one, removing their equipment, and lying down next to the UGV,” the tech outlet wrote in a note, adding the UGV has a ballistic computer and artificial intelligence for autonomous detection, capture, and tracking of targets.
What is clear is that wheeled combat robots on the modern battlefield in Ukraine, used for offensive operations, could soon transition into humanoid robotic platforms.
California-based robotics startup Foundation is developing the Phantom humanoid robot for both commercial and military use.
The firm has stated ambitions to build tens of thousands of these humanoids, capable of carrying payloads and various weapon platforms, for use in dangerous missions, such as breaching buildings, and has secured defense contracts and interest from U.S. military programs.
Unlike other robotics companies such as Boston Dynamics, Agility Robotics, ANYbotics, Clearpath Robotics, Open Robotics, Unitree, and Figure AI, all of which have stated that their humanoids will not be used in military or defense applications, Foundation has stated otherwise.
Foundation’s Phantom MK1 has been trained on the 9mm pistol.
CEO Sankaet Pathak confirmed Phantom MK1 has had weapons training in a recent conversation with tech blog Humanoids Daily.
According to Forbes, Foundation deployed 40 robots in 2025, with manufacturing expanding this year to 10,000, then to 50,000 by late 2027.
Given that Foundation is one of the very few, if not only, robotics firms in the US with a DoD contract specifically for an offensive humanoid combat robot, it wouldn’t be a surprise if these bots were found on the Ukrainian battlefield for testing later this year.
Great time for a Polymarket bet on when Skynet arrives …
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/02/2026 – 23:00
Harvey City Council deadlocks, fails to select acting mayor following death of Christopher Clark
A special City Council meeting called following the death Friday of Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark ended without an acting mayor being appointed after no alderperson was able to secure support from a majority of the council.
Both 1st Ward Ald. Shirley Drewenski and 5th Ward Ald. Dominique Randle-El were nominated for acting mayor, but the City Council split down the middle.
Drewenski was supported by 6th Ward Ald. Tyrone Rogers and 3rd Ward Ald. Telanee Smith, while Randle-El was supported by 2nd Ward Ald. Colby Chapman and 4th Ward Ald. Tracy Key. Neither had the four votes necessary for majority approval of the six-member council.
Drewenski is serving as mayor pro tempore, and will continue in that position until an acting mayor is selected. The acting mayor will then serve out the remainder of Clark’s term, which is set to expire in April 2027.
Chapman, who has previously stated her intent to run for mayor in 2027, did not put herself forward for acting mayor.
“I want to be elected by the people, not selected by my peers,” Chapman said.
Harvey 4th Ward Ald. Tracy Key, left, and 2nd Ward Ald. Colby Chapman, center, attend Monday’s City Council meeting called to elected an acting mayor following the death Friday of Mayor Christopher J. Clark. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)
Chapman also supported a motion brought by Key at the start of the meeting to delay the selection of an acting mayor until Feb. 9.
“Give us a little bit more time to make sure we get this right,” Key said. “Everybody’s grieving right now, and this is too sudden. A decision of this magnitude, I think, needs a little bit more time.”
Key’s motion was voted down by the other four members of the council. However, as the meeting ended without an acting mayor being chosen, the issue is likely to come up again at the next regular council meeting, 7 p.m. on Feb. 9, at Harvey City Hall, 15320 Broadway Ave.
Tributes to Clark
Rogers said Monday that Clark died following an unexpected illness.
“Mayor Clark was a visionary, a leader, believed in the promise of this city and worked tirelessly to ensure a better future for all residents,” Rogers said. “He was a man of great integrity.”
Drewenski offered condolences on behalf of the City Council and city staff to Clark’s mother, who was in attendance, prompting a standing ovation from the audience.
“Mayor Clark was deeply committed to the city of Harvey, and the people. His leadership, and his dedication, and his love for our community will not be forgotten,” Drewenski said while asking for a moment of silence. “God bless you, Chris.”
Clark was first elected as mayor in 2019, and reelected in 2023.
A City Council meeting scheduled for Jan. 26 was canceled only hours before it was set to begin, with no explanation given. Clark had been absent from the previous meeting, on Jan. 12, which was instead chaired by Randle-El.
Randle-El said that he hoped the city would be able to come together following Clark’s passing.
“Are we a community, or are we just a city? Are we a community, or are we just an incorporation, as you see on the wall, where it says we were incorporated in 1891?” Randle-El said. “We’re more than that. We’re more than yesterday, and what we are is what we make.”
Clark’s death comes in the midst of a difficult time for Harvey, which is in a state of financial crisis and appealed to the state for fiscal aid last October. Following that declaration, more than 40% of the city’s workforce was laid off.
Smith suggested that public criticism of Clark had played a role in hastening his death.
“Three consistent years of deliberate attacks, of false accusations, social media bullying,” Smith said. “All of this based on personal vendetta.”
elewis@chicagotribune.com
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/02/harvey-city-council-deadlocks-acting-mayor/
America At 250: The Words That Helped Ignite A Revolution
America At 250: The Words That Helped Ignite A Revolution
Authored by Gene Pisasale, via RealClearWire,
“… a thirst for absolute power is the natural disease of monarchy …. To the evil of monarchy we have added hereditary succession … the first is a degradation and lessening of ourselves … the second, claimed as a matter of right, is an insult and an imposition on posterity.”
– Thomas Paine, “Common Sense”
On Jan. 10, 1776, Robert Bell did something that could have landed him in prison for treason against King George III of England.
In his small shop on Third Street in downtown Philadelphia, Bell printed an incendiary 47-page pamphlet, published anonymously, calling for rebellion against the Crown and independence from Great Britain.
Its author was a little-known Englishman who had befriended Benjamin Franklin in London two years earlier.
Franklin was impressed with the man and recommended that he emigrate to the colonies, which he did that same year.
Arriving in America just five months before shots were fired at Lexington and Concord, Thomas Paine had a front row seat as the American Revolutionary War was unfolding.
Despite “the shot heard ’round the world” on April 19, 1775, calls for independence were relatively muted throughout the colonies, historians estimating that only about 25 percent of citizens supported the move.
That changed after “Common Sense” hit the streets, being widely read and discussed openly in taverns and coffeehouses throughout the land.
Within approximately one year, an estimated 100,000 copies were sold—a remarkable feat considering the population of America was only about 2.5 million.
After its widespread distribution, Paine’s words proved highly persuasive to tens of thousands across the colonies, nudging support for independence to well over 50 percent. Paine followed it up with an even more persuasive clarion call—“The American Crisis”—in December 1776, its words so grippingly effective that General George Washington had it read out loud to his troops in an attempt to keep his Army together:
“THESE are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.”
An Incredibly Risky Wager
As America had a miniscule Army and ineffective Navy in 1776—versus Great Britain with the most powerful Army in the western hemisphere and a colossally-equipped Navy, only the most aggressive wagerer would have made the bet that the colonies could prevail.
After the move for independence was put into writing on July 4, 1776, the die was cast.
The members of the Second Continental Congress understood that what they were hoping to achieve would be a “long shot” by any reasonable standard.
Early Losses, but Some Victories
King George III and his senior military officers had a lot to be optimistic about early on. The city of Boston was surrounded, then Crown forces took control of another major port—New York—and Washington’s troops were not only on the run—they were ragged, nearly starving, and dangerously low on supplies.
Retreating across the Delaware River to Pennsylvania, Washington knew he had to be bold to survive. With the help of financier Robert Morris and others, Washington received enough cash and materials to forge not only one, but two attacks that would change the way people viewed the war.
The Battle of Trenton on Dec. 26, 1776 and the Battle of Princeton on Jan. 3, 1777 were brilliantly conceived and stunningly successful victories at a time when the Commander knew his Army was near collapse. Being a deeply religious man who often visited local churches during the war, Washington was convinced that a “higher power” had kept his dream—what he called “the Cause”—alive.
A Leap in the Dark
Historian John Ferling captured the essence of this tumultuous era effectively in “A Leap in the Dark: The Struggle to Create the American Republic.” In the book, Ferling describes the “behind the scenes” workings of all the major players, noting their strengths, their weaknesses, and their own doubts about whether they could possibly succeed.
That Washington’s Army was desperate for a victory to end the conflict is an understatement.
Most days they were just hoping to find food and stay on their feet. Though the Continental Army had eked out a few wins, the odds still favored the British. The war would drag on until British General Cornwallis found himself in deep trouble in Virginia, getting surrounded by Washington’s as well as France’s troops and warships leading up to the climactic Battle of Yorktown in October 1781.
A World-Changing Event
Though it may be apocryphal, when Cornwallis surrendered, it has been reported that the British troops were so stunned, they played the English ballad “The World Turned Upside Down” as they relinquished the battlefield to Washington—who literally “by the grace of God” had managed to survive.
The soldiers who had stood by Washington from the beginning, through the defeats in New York and Philadelphia, the horrendous freezing Winters at Valley Forge and Morristown, surely felt in their veins what those assembled in downtown Philadelphia had written on July 4th: “… with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”
Considering the overwhelming odds against us, it is not a stretch to say that the words to the tune written decades later were true: “America! America! God shed His grace on thee …”
Looking back 250 years, it becomes clear that the sacred fire of liberty which burned in those hearty souls was not only a flame that couldn’t be extinguished—it was an idea which was destined to change the world.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/02/2026 – 22:35
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/america-250-words-helped-ignite-revolution
Revolving Green Door: Former Biden Officials Landed Jobs With Environmental NGOs After Funneling Money To Them
Revolving Green Door: Former Biden Officials Landed Jobs With Environmental NGOs After Funneling Money To Them
As the Trump administration’s Department of Energy moves to wipe out over $83 billion in “Green New Scam” loans and conditional commitments approved in the final months of the Biden administration, a new analysis reveals that not only did the rush to spend accelerate right after Biden’s disastrous June 27, 2024 debate with now-President Donald Trump, senior Biden officials landed roles at organizations that received agency funding. In some cases, money was steered to NGOs that the officials worked for before joining the government – where they then returned following the cash bonanza.
Following the debate where Biden revealed how cooked he is, nonprofit watchdog Democracy Restored found that billions of dollars began rushing out the door to over a dozen environmental and climate-focused NGOs, including that Alliance for Sustainable Energy, Climate United Fund, the Ocean Conservancy, the Nature Conservancy, and Rocky Mountain Institute, according to Just the News.
Using data from USASpending.gov, Democracy Resorted found that federal agencies had obligated more than $600 million in taxpayer money to these organizations since July 1, 2024. The obligations began to drop the day after the election. Obligations to these same organizations since Nov. 5, 2024 fell to $246 million.
While various agencies were providing millions in support to these organizations, high-level officials within the agencies either went to work for them after Trump took office, or they had previously worked for them prior to assuming key roles at the agencies under Biden. -JTN
Using data from USASpending.gov, Democracy Restored found that federal agencies obligated more than $600 million to environmental and climate-focused nonprofits beginning July 1, 2024 — including the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, Climate United Fund, Ocean Conservancy, Nature Conservancy, and Rocky Mountain Institute.
That flow of taxpayer cash slowed dramatically after the election. Since Nov. 5, 2024, obligations to the same organizations dropped to $246 million, according to the watchdog group.
At the same time, Democracy Restored identified a pattern that raised eyebrows: senior federal officials moving into roles at organizations that received agency funding — or having previously worked for them before holding key government posts.
I think the money being shoveled out after President Biden’s debate and the apparent revolving door of appointees going to recipients of these federal funds raises many questions about the timing of the money, the impact of special interests in the Biden administration and the general ethics surrounding this behavior,” said Houston Keene, director of Democracy Restored, in comments to Just the News.
Loan office under fire
Scrutiny has focused on the Department of Energy’s Loans Programs Office, now renamed the Office of Energy Dominancy Financing.
In August 2024, the DOE awarded the World Resources Institute a $1 million grant aimed at supporting school bus fleet electrification training and collaboration.
Two former senior DOE officials are now senior fellows at the institute: Jigar Shah, who served as director of the Loans Programs Office, and Jennifer Wilcox, who was principal deputy assistant secretary at the Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management.
Jigar Shah attends the 2024 TIME100 Gala (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for TIME)
Shah’s tenure has drawn particular attention. The Washington Free Beacon reported in May that the Loans Programs Office approved a loan to Plug Power, a New York-based green hydrogen company, in May 2024.
According to the repoprt Shah’s private equity firm previously invested $100 million in Plug Power, and the company once described the firm as a “longstanding partner.” Shah told the Beacon that he did not work directly on Plug Power’s loan and said the company applied before he joined the office.
An Office of Inspector General audit released in December found that 20% of Loans Programs Office employees reviewed had a potential conflict of interest – or the appearance of impaired impartiality – while performing their duties.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright testified in May that the office issued roughly $40 billion in loans over the prior 15 years, but that figure ballooned to $100 billion in just the final 76 days of the Biden administration. Wright said those rushed loan agreements lacked safeguards traditionally required by the DOE.
The revolving door keeps spinning
Democracy Restored’s review identified other examples of officials cycling between government agencies and nonprofit recipients.
Renee Stone, formerly in senior leadership roles at NOAA, now serves as vice president of climate for the Audubon Society. During the Biden administration, Audubon received nearly $4 million across three grants for habitat restoration projects.
Monica Medina, another former NOAA official, is now a distinguished fellow at Conservation International, which received a $9 million grant in 2023 for an ecosystem restoration project in Hawaii.
Chetan Hebbale, once a policy adviser in the White House, later joined the Nature Conservancy as a climate and conservation finance policy adviser. The organization received more than $6 million in federal funding during Biden’s term.
Federal ethics law restricts certain post-government actions by former senior officials, but it does not prohibit them from accepting employment with private or nonprofit organizations — even those that received government funding.
Keene emphasized that there is no evidence any of these individuals directly worked on the grants in question, but said the relationships warrant closer examination.
Offshore wind ties raise questions
The Biden administration’s aggressive push for 30 gigawatts of offshore wind also drew scrutiny.
Oceans Conservancy, a vocal supporter of offshore wind expansion, received nearly $6 million in two grants from NOAA during the Biden years. The group has also received support from Orsted, a major offshore wind developer.
Susan Ruffo, who previously served as managing director of international initiatives at Oceans Conservancy, later worked for NOAA and other federal agencies.
“I think it says a lot about the stewardship of tax dollars under the Biden administration,” Keene said. “If you were an organization that agreed with the administration politically, they weren’t afraid to cut you a check. That’s a problem for the taxpayer.”
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/02/2026 – 22:10
Two months after injury, Andrew’s Nadeem Haleem returns to win regional title. Next goal? ‘Be a state champ.’
After missing nearly two months with a knee injury, Andrew’s Nadeem Haleem was ready to step back on the mat just in time for the postseason.
But Haleem, a senior 138-pounder who finished sixth in the state last season, was not really sure what to expect from himself in his first competition back.
“I didn’t know what I was in for,” Haleem said. “I didn’t know if I was going to be gassed in all my matches or if I’d be able to wrestle how I was before the injury.
“I was really nervous going into it, but obviously, I performed well.”
He sure did. Haleem returned with a vengeance and no hesitation Saturday, consistently piling up points with aggressive attacking on his way to winning the 138-pound championship at the Class 3A Rich Township Regional in Richton Park.
Andrew sophomore Mason Rohe, who finished second at 120, was certainly impressed.
Andrew’s Nadeem Haleem, left, holds up Lincoln-Way West’s Shane Stream in the 138-pound final of the Class 3A Rich Township Regional in Richton Park on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (Vincent D. Johnson / Daily Southtown)
“He did a great job, especially after being two months off from wrestling,” Rohe said of Haleem. “He came back hard and he did a great job in his final match.”
That championship match was a wild battle against Lincoln-Way West’s Shane Stream, who came in ranked No. 6 in 3A by the Illinois Wrestling Coaches and Officials Association.
Haleem and Stream traded big blows and momentum surges and each lit up the scoreboard. Stream appeared to nearly have Haleem pinned at one point.
But Haleem pulled away for a 26-16 win.
“I know him and he scrambles a lot,” Haleem said of Stream. “I knew I was going to get put in weird spots and weird positions, so it was just about fighting through it and being smarter.
“He ended up putting me on my back one time, but that wasn’t going to stop me.”
Andrew coach Pete Kowalczuk saw it as the perfect match for Haleem to be in after returning from time off.
“We knew Shane Stream is a really dangerous opponent and you have to wrestle in all positions with him,” Kowalczuk said. “It’s good for ‘Dino’ to kind of feel that pressure again. He’s been wrestling in matches like this forever.
Andrew’s Nadeem Haleem, left, goes for a takedown on Lincoln-Way West’s Shane Stream in the 138-pound final of the Class 3A Rich Township Regional in Richton Park on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (Vincent D. Johnson / Daily Southtown)
“His best attribute is his competitive drive. He’s got a lot of heart.”
And Haleem’s passion for wrestling has been taken up another notch after being out.
“It definitely makes my appreciate it even more,” Haleem said. “It gives me a lot of motivation for these last few weeks.
“I know it’s my last time in high school, at least, so I might as well go out and prove something. It gives me something to chase for.”
Haleem sprained his MCL in early December, but that wasn’t even the first injury of his senior year. In the preseason, he suffered a broken ankle in the same left leg.
“This year has been my year to get injured,” he said. “When I was out this last time, I did a lot of physical therapy. Even before I started practicing again, I was still working out. I was lifting during all our practices. That definitely helped.”
Andrew’s Nadeem Haleem, right, rolls over Lincoln-Way West’s Shane Stream in the 138-pound final of the Class 3A Rich Township Regional in Richton Park on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (Vincent D. Johnson / Daily Southtown)
Haleem, who moved up to No. 6 in the IWCOA rankings after Saturday’s title, is headed next week to the Edwardsville Sectional attempting to become a four-time state qualifier.
Kowalczuk expects all Haleem’s past experiences at state, including last season’s journey when he broke through to reach the podium for the first time, to help him.
“I think there’s just a calmness under fire that helps him the most,” Kowalczuk said. “He knows the match is never over until it’s over. He knows how to be calm, cool and collected when it matters the most.
“He wants to be a state champ. We’re going to get better over the next two weeks and be ready.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/02/nadeem-haleem-andrew-boys-wrestling/












