John Lillig
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John Lillig
@jclillig.bsky.social
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English Teacher, Loyola Academy XC/Basketball/Soccer/T&F Coach, North Shore Country Day School A.B., English (Georgetown), M.A., English (DePaul), J.D. (DePaul Law) Visiting Student (University of East Anglia) Arts & Culture Bluesky: @jclillig2.bsky.social
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Reposted by John Lillig
Cape Verde will play in the World Cup for the first time after beating Eswatini. The nation will be the second-smallest country by population to ever play in the tournament: https://www.wpri.com/sports/world-cup/cape-verde-qualifies-for-the-world-cup-for-the-first-time-after-beating-eswatini/ 
Reposted by John Lillig
Reposted by John Lillig
“It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone.”
Cubs' 2025 postseason run ends with Game 5 loss to Brewers in NLDS
<p>MILWAUKEE — Yellow and Blue streamers fell from the ceiling, and the Brewers stormed the field. A line of Cubs players looked on silently from the visitor's dugout at American Family Field. </p><p>Their postseason run had just ended with a 3-1 loss to the Brewers on Saturday in Game 5 of the National League Division Series.</p><p>It was the Cubs’ fourth elimination game of the postseason, and those back-against-the-wall circumstances had brought the best out of the team in the first three. But the magic didn't extend to the last game of the series.</p><p>“The finality of it, the stress of it, that's all there,” manager Craig Counsell said before the game. “But if you flip it to know that, ‘Man, this is what I worked so hard for,’ that's when you get to a place that your best self comes out. And that's all you can ask.”</p><p>The Cubs wavered, their plans to hop on a plane after the game in Milwaukee dashed. And the Brewers claimed their first postseason series victory in seven years to win a date with the Dodgers in the NL Championship Series.</p><p>It wasn’t certain for much of the close contest Saturday, however, which team would deal the final blow.</p><p>The long series set up a two-sided bullpen day Saturday.</p><p>The openers happened to be relievers who had each played for both teams in their careers.</p><p>For the Cubs, Drew Pomeranz, who hadn’t allowed a baserunner all postseason, earned the assignment. For the Brewers, it was All-Star closer Trevor Megill, who returned from a strained right flexor on the last day of the regular season.</p><p>“Both sides are kind of acknowledging that the first inning has been a pretty big inning in this series,” manager Craig Counsell said before the game.</p><p>In the first four games of the series, 60% of the teams’ combined run-scoring occurred in the first inning.</p><p>On Saturday, however, for the first time in the NLDS, the Cubs didn’t score in the first inning, as Megill retired the top of the Cubs’ lineup in order.</p><p>Then another first: Pomeranz gave up a solo home run to William Contreras.</p><p>That made the Cubs’ immediate response all the more important. The Brewers brought in flame-throwing rookie Jacob Misiorowski for the second inning. And as soon as he threw a fastball over the plate, on his second pitch of the outing, Cubs slugger Seiya Suzuki tied up the game with a solo shot of his own.</p><p>The Brewers have been so good at capitalizing on their opponents’ mistakes all year – and in Game 1 of the NLDS turned an error by Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner into four unearned runs.</p><p>So, when Cubs shortstop committed an error in the third inning, his high throw pulling first baseman Michael Busch off the bag, the next play became pivotal.</p><p>Right-hander Colin Rea induced the Brewers’ Jackson Chourio to hit a grounder to Hoerner, and he and Swanson turned a double play to erase the blunder.</p><p>In the fourth, however, the lead swung back to the Brewers, thanks again to the long ball. Rea missed over the middle with a cutter to Andrew Vaughn, who smoked it on a line over the left-field wall.</p><p>Then Sal Frelick beat out a single on a soft ground ball up the middle. And Caleb Durbin moved Frelick to third with a low liner into center field. Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong didn’t field it cleanly and after scrambling to grab the rebound, he rushed the throw in, allowing Durbin to advance to second.</p><p>Rea then issued a walk to load the bases. Counsell turned to Daniel Palencia, who he dubbed his “fireman” or middle-of-the game closer. Palencia lived up to the unofficial title and escaped with a grounder from Joey Ortiz.</p><p>The Cubs weren’t going down easily.</p><p>They put two runners on with no outs in the sixth, with a single and a hit by pitch. After Brewers left-hander Aaron Ashby struck out Cubs designated hitter Kyle Tucker, Brewers manager Pat Murphy called in right-hander Chad Patrck to face Suzuki.</p><p>Suzuki hit a line drive to left field, but it was caught at the warning track. Patrick then struck out Ian Happ and fist-pumed to celebrate squashing the Cubs’ latest offensive counter.</p><p>The Brewers then doubled down the next inning. This time, it was Brice Turang’s turn to hit a one-run homer off Cubs veteran right-hander Andrew Kittredge.</p><p>Just to get the NLDS to a Game 5, the Cubs had to beat the odds, after the hole they dug for themselves in the first two games of the series.</p><p>They lost the first two games at American Family Field, outscored by the Brewers 16-6 over the course of both contests. The Cubs’ starting pitching struggled and offense became overly reliant on the home run. Whereas, the Brewers hitters held on consistent pressure and capitalized on mistakes.</p><p>The climb ahead was steep, but it wasn’t unprecedented. The Cubs had won three straight elimination games once before in playoff history, and the last victory clinched the 2016 World Series title.</p><p>Roles, and momentum, reversed when the series moved to Wrigley Field, and the Cubs kept their hopes of a deep postseason run alive.<br></p>
chicago.suntimes.com
Reposted by John Lillig
For the first time in 30 years, the Phillies, Flyers and Eagles all played on the same night.

They all lost.

Perhaps Philly does not want that to happen again for another 30 years.
Reposted by John Lillig
Loyola University Chicago is greatly saddened to confirm the death of Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, BVM. This is a tremendous loss of someone who touched the lives of so many people. We appreciate everyone’s thoughts & prayers during this difficult time. For more information: https://bit.ly/4o7eIUk
Reposted by John Lillig
The Pep Effect, Mate 🇦🇺

This Australian U8 side looked like it was managed by a Guardiola disciple. The 2042 Socceroos might be a PROBLEM.

📹: IG/aquilina_brothers
It has been 4 months since former Kenyon AD Jill McCartney's name disappeared from the Kenyon College Athletics website without a statement from the College. This unsourced 9/18 report remains the only published confirmation of her departure.
Yesterday 9/18 the Kenyon Collegian published the first reporting confirming (without attribution) that former Kenyon AD Jill McCartney has "left the College," but report no details about the date or circumstances of her departure and include no statement from the College.
Tommy Bell announced as temporary director of Athletics — The Kenyon Collegian
On Aug. 29, the Kenyon Department of Athletics, Fitness and Recreation announced that Tommy Bell will be filling the role of interim director of Athletics, Fitness and Recreation. Jill McCartney, who ...
kenyoncollegian.com
Reposted by John Lillig
Sister Jean has retired at 106 as Loyola’s beloved basketball chaplain. blockclubchi.co/4pvClYa
Reposted by John Lillig
I really hope they “update” the story and this brazen whitewash doesn’t confirm what appears to be ESPN’s belief that there is no way we’d care about a coverup, let alone how Rudi Johnson died.
Noticed today that your bio references the theme of the story as well.
Reposted by John Lillig
It's Roberto Clemente Day & you're going to hear a lot about the wonderful things he did as a human & on the baseball field.

You should also take a few minutes today to read this piece about Clemente's inside the park, walkoff grand slam & why it took decades to celebrate
lithub.com/the-greatest...
The Greatest Forgotten Home Run of All Time
The following essay appears in this week’s Summer 2015 issue of  The Massachusetts Review.   On July 25th, 1956, Roberto Clemente did a terrible, wonderful thing. In his sophomore year w…
lithub.com
Thanks so much for posting this. So good. Sent it to multiple people who will also appreciate it.
I love this song. Original by Laura Nyro also great. Thanks for posting.
Reposted by John Lillig
Swimmers take the plunge for first Chicago River race in nearly a century

Following a years-long clean up initiative, the river swim benefitted ALS research and at-risk youth.
Swimmers take the plunge for first Chicago River race in nearly a century
Following a years-long clean up initiative, the river swim benefitted ALS research and at-risk youth.
depauliaonline.com
Reposted by John Lillig
Quite the intro for CBS's The NFL Today, celebrating its 50th anniversary.
Reposted by John Lillig
I'm so old that I remember when dudes would give players crap for missing a game for the birth of their children. I suppose attending a political rally disguised as a funeral for a podcaster is more defensible.
www.nytimes.com/athletic/665...
Matt Shaw misses Cubs game to attend memorial service for Charlie Kirk
The night of Kirk’s death, Shaw was scratched from Chicago’s starting lineup due to unspecified personal reasons.
www.nytimes.com
The Kenyon Collegian report cites generally the 8/29 interim AD announcement & an interview w/ the interim AD. It reports without citing a source that a temporary AD served over the summer. Still no statement or explanation from the College about McCartney's departure.
McCartney's name disappeared from the Kenyon athletics website in early June without a statement from the College, and the Friday-before-Labor-Day announcement of the interim AD contained no mention of McCartney.
Yesterday 9/18 the Kenyon Collegian published the first reporting confirming (without attribution) that former Kenyon AD Jill McCartney has "left the College," but report no details about the date or circumstances of her departure and include no statement from the College.
Tommy Bell announced as temporary director of Athletics — The Kenyon Collegian
On Aug. 29, the Kenyon Department of Athletics, Fitness and Recreation announced that Tommy Bell will be filling the role of interim director of Athletics, Fitness and Recreation. Jill McCartney, who ...
kenyoncollegian.com
Reposted by John Lillig
🛏️ TGIF. I need the weekend.

🗞️ In Today’s Edition. Is It Time For Division III to Revisit Its Structure? CCIW Executive Director Maureen Harty to Retire. House Republicans Delay SCORE Act Vote. $3,000 Pokemon Card #D3Playbook www.d3playbook.com/p/is-it-time...
Is It Time For Division III to Revisit Its Structure?
Could moment where that group of 80 to 100 to 120 schools actually branches off into something else be near?
www.d3playbook.com