logo
Pope Leo XIV brings hope to Chicago sports fans, and the Knicks for their Villanova ties

Pope Leo XIV brings hope to Chicago sports fans, and the Knicks for their Villanova ties

CBC09-05-2025

The sports loyalties of Pope Leo XIV became a topic of conversation almost as soon as the white smoke emerged from the Vatican's Sistine Chapel.
Elected on Thursday, Robert Prevost is the first pope from the United States in the history of the Catholic Church. The Chicago-born missionary, who took the name Leo XIV, also attended Villanova University near Philadelphia, where he received a Bachelor of Science in 1977.
Chicago's two baseball teams were front and center as sports fans reacted to the news.
It was initially reported that the new pope was a Cubs fan. The team congratulated Pope Leo XIV in a post on X that had a picture of Wrigley Field's iconic marquee with the message: HEY, CHICAGO. HE'S A CUBS FAN!
But his brother, John Prevost, set the record straight in an interview with WGN-TV. The pope is a White Sox fan.
"He was never ever a Cubs fan, so I don't know where that came from. He was always a Sox fan," John said, adding that the confusion might stem from the fact their mother's side of the family were North Siders and Cubs fans.
The White Sox posted a clip from the brother's WGN interview on X, along with a picture of the Rate Field videoboard with the message: HEY CHICAGO, HE'S A SOX FAN! The post read "Well, would you look at that... Congratulations to Chicago's own Pope Leo XIV."
"Family always knows best, and it sounds like Pope Leo XIV's lifelong fandom falls a little closer to 35th and Shields," the White Sox said in a media statement. "Some things are bigger than baseball, and in this case, we're glad to have a White Sox fan represented at the Vatican. A pinstripes White Sox jersey with his name on it and a hat already are on the way to Rome, and of course, the Pontiff always is welcome at his ballpark."
The TV interview had White Sox fans wondering about the pope's ability to convince owner Jerry Reinsdorf to sell the last-place team.
Bears now have direct line to God
Long-suffering Bears fans weighed in, too.
One remarked on X that Chicago developed a pope before the Bears developed a quarterback. Another said the Bears now have a direct line to God. And another said the Bears no longer will be on the wrong side of Hail Marys, a reference to Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels' 52-yard Hail Mary completion to Noah Brown to beat the Bears in October.
The election of the new pope coincides with a trio of former Villanova players leading the New York Knicks on an NBA playoff run.
It didn't take long for a photoshopped picture of the four of them together to show up on social media.
The Knicks erased 20-point deficits in winning Games 1 and 2 against the defending champion Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oilers seek more early goals to avoid Game 6 elimination in Stanley Cup final
Oilers seek more early goals to avoid Game 6 elimination in Stanley Cup final

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

Oilers seek more early goals to avoid Game 6 elimination in Stanley Cup final

Florida Panthers' goalie Sergei Bobrovsky (72) makes a save as Aaron Ekblad (5) and Edmonton Oilers Connor McDavid (97) battle in front during third period of Game 5 of the NHL Stanley Cup final in Edmonton, Saturday, June 14, 2025. The Edmonton Oilers' quest for a Stanley Cup would be less uphill if they could strike first in a game in the series, says their coach. The Florida Panthers have outscored the Oilers 7-0 in the first period in three straight games of the Cup final, and 11-4 in first periods overall in the series. Edmonton trails the best-of-seven championship series 3-2 heading into Tuesday's Game 6 in Sunrise, Fla., where the defending champion Panthers will complete a Cup repeat if the Oilers can't wrest the series home to Edmonton on Friday. Early deficits and chasing Florida need to be reined in for the Oilers to avoid elimination a second straight year at the hands of the Panthers, said Kris Knoblauch on Sunday. 'Capitalizing early would be something that would be very good for us,' was an understatement by the head coach. 'I know numerous starts of games we've had quality chances very early in the games. 'If we're able to capitalize on those, playing with the lead early in the game would alleviate the pressure. We just have to be ready to start. That's so important.' After Connor Brown's semi-breakaway 29 seconds into Saturday's 5-2 loss at Rogers Place, Edmonton didn't register another shot on net for the next eight minutes. Within seconds of the Oilers launching their first two salvos on Sergei Bobrovsky, the ice suddenly tilted in the Panthers' favour. Brad Marchand was quicker to the puck off a neutral-zone faceoff the Oilers won. He beat Mattias Ekholm inside to get to goalie Calvin Pickard, and Edmonton was chasing again. The Oilers may be the comeback kings of the 2025 playoffs with eight come-from-behind wins, but going to that well again in a Cup elimination game Tuesday against the defending champions is a low-odds scenario, and also didn't happen Saturday. 'It'd be nice to have that lead and play with that, just knowing that they have to open things up when they're trailing,' Knoblauch said. The combination of a short turnaround and the travel between Thursday's Game 4 in Sunrise and Saturday's Game 5 in Edmonton further impeded the Oilers' chances of another comeback victory. Both teams get a longer breather ahead of Tuesday's Game 6, but the Oilers arguably need more time to top up the tank. The Panthers up 2-0 after the first period and 3-0 early in the third Saturday were able to hold their top three producers — Sam Reinhart, Sam Bennett and Marchand — to a combined 45 minutes of ice time compared to Edmonton's top trio of Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and defenceman Evan Bouchard at a combined 76 minutes. McDavid scored his first goal of the Cup final to cut the deficit to two goals in the third period. He and Draisaitl are the NHL playoff co-leaders at 33 points apiece. The Oilers need McDavid's offensive wizardry Tuesday while the Panthers will try to take away the captain's time and space. 'There's been a lot of good scoring chances for him,' Knoblauch said. 'I've got no issues with his game. 'Our team relies heavily on him and Leon and how they're playing. It's tight checking for everyone and it's not going to be a mid-season game against a non-playoff team when there's sometimes (McDavid) has had 10 or 12 scoring chances. 'Those numbers are obviously reduced playing against a good team like Florida but I think Connor's been one of our best players every single night and that's what we expect.' Knoblauch didn't reveal Sunday whether Pickard or Stuart Skinner would be his Game 6 starter. Pickard stopped 14 of 18 shots after 22 of 23 in relief of Skinner in Edmonton's Game 4 overtime win. The coach stated his choice of goalie was 'not an easy decision', but acknowledged life would also be easier on either netminder if the Oilers weren't trying to get up off the mat early. 'It'd be nice to get some goal support and last night was a case where we were having difficulty generating offence,' Knoblauch said. The Panthers beat the Oilers 2-1 in Game 7 to win the 2024 Stanley Cup. Florida led the series 3-0 before the Oilers won three straight to send it back to Sunrise. 'Certainly, the context changes when you get this close, but having a bit of an experience does matter,' Panthers head coach Paul Maurice said. 'It does help in this. We were all pretty wired after Game 3 last year, and I think we can handle that a bit better now.' The Panthers can become the first franchise to clinch each of their first two championships on home ice since the Los Angeles Kings in 2012 and 2014. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 15, 2025. Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press

Ratings are down as Pacers and Thunder slug it out in NBA finals
Ratings are down as Pacers and Thunder slug it out in NBA finals

Globe and Mail

time3 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Ratings are down as Pacers and Thunder slug it out in NBA finals

The ratings are down for these NBA Finals, as was expected. Oklahoma City vs. Indiana is a small-market series and the numbers reflect that, with viewership down about 20 per cent from last season and on pace for the poorest TV turnout since the pandemic 'bubble' finals in 2020. Don't blame the Thunder and Pacers for that. It's been a back-and-forth over the first four games — and now, a best-of-three will decide the NBA title. Game 5 is in Oklahoma City on Monday night, with the Thunder trying to take their first lead of the series and the Pacers trying to head back home one win away from a championship. 'I do not care, to be honest with you,' Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton said when asked what he'd say to those who, for whatever reason, haven't tuned into the series. 'This is high-level basketball and I'm excited to be a part of it.' Game 1 had a frantic Indiana comeback and a Haliburton buzzer-beater. Game 2 saw Oklahoma City do what it has done in the majority of games all season: take full control early and roll to a win. Game 3 in Indiana had the Pacers' bench fueling a win. And Game 4 saw the MVP do MVP things, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scoring 15 points in the final five minutes to carry the Thunder to a comeback win. Add it up, and it's Thunder 2, Pacers 2. The Thunder are outscoring the Pacers by 3.3 points per game; the Pacers are outshooting the Thunder by 1.4 per cent. It's only the third time in the last 15 years that the finals have had all that through four games — 2-2 tie, 3.3-point differential or less, shooting within 1.4 per cent of each other. Golden State-Boston had it in 2022, and Dallas-Miami had it in 2011. It all seems pretty even, and the looks aren't deceiving. 'It's good for y'all,' Thunder guard Alex Caruso said. 'Good for me, we'd be getting ready for a parade right now.' Parades in Indianapolis or Oklahoma City are going to have to wait at least until this coming weekend. This series seems like it could have debunked some of the tired complaints about the game in recent years: the nobody-plays-defence, too-much-isolation, too-many-threes arguments that have been out there. 'I think from an outside perspective it's great for the league,' Caruso said. 'It's great for basketball. I think these two teams play stylistically the best versions of basketball right now as far as pressure and being influencing and aggressive on defence — causing turnovers, making stuff hard and then offensively free-flowing, shot making, passing the ball. ... A great brand of basketball.' And that means it could end up as a great finals, whether more people start watching or not. 'We appreciate the opportunity to play this deep into the season,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'If you're playing this deep into the season, your opponent is going to be really good. They have won 12 games to get to this point just like we have. You just know it's going to be an unbelievable level. There are definitely times in it where (you're saying), 'Man, this is a high, high level.'' This marks the 32nd time that a finals has been 2-2 going into Game 5. The winner of Game 5 has gone on to ultimately prevail in 23 of the 31 previous occasions. 'We are both two games away,' Haliburton said. 'Anything can happen here.'

Angel Reese has triple double, Van Lith scores career-high 16 points and Sky defeat Sun 78-66
Angel Reese has triple double, Van Lith scores career-high 16 points and Sky defeat Sun 78-66

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Angel Reese has triple double, Van Lith scores career-high 16 points and Sky defeat Sun 78-66

UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) — Angel Reese had her first triple double, Hailey Van Lith led a dominant performance by the Chicago bench with a career-high 16 points and the Sky pulled away from the Connecticut Sun for a 78-66 win on Sunday. Fueled by Reese's 11 assists — more than double her previous career high — Chicago put five players in double figures. The Sky bench outscored the Sun reserves 36-2 in the Commissioner's Cup game. Reese also had 11 points and 13 rebounds for Chicago (3-7). Kia Nurse had 11 points on 4-of-4 shooting with three 3s, and Kamilla Cardoso and Ariel Atkins both had 10 points. Reserve Rachel Banham made her 300th career 3-pointer. Marina Mabrey scored 22 points with five 3s for the Sun (2-8). Tina Charles added 19 points and Jacy Sheldon had 12. Both teams shot 40% and made six 3-ointers in the first half but the Sky were perfect on eight free throws to take a 38-36 lead. Mabrey was the only player in double figures with 16. Mabrey's 3 and two free throws by Charles gave Connecticut a 47-44 lead early in the second half but Michaela Onyenwere and Reese converted three-point plays to make it 51-48. The Sky led 59-54 entering the fourth quarter. Up next Chicago is home against Washington and Connecticut goes to Indiana on Tuesday. ___ AP WNBA:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store