Illinois
PFF grades: Michigan football high/low player grades, snap counts to know after loss to Illinois
Michigan took its third loss of the season on Saturday when it lost to Illinois 21-7. Coming off of a bye week, the Wolverines were expected to fix some of the issues that haunted them in the first half of the season, but many wonder if Michigan was worse coming off the bye. Scoring seven points was the lowest output in 10 years and veteran quarterback Jack Tuttle was the third starting quarterback who didn’t look competent for the maize and blue.
Tuttle threw two interceptions — one was called back due to a flag — and fumbled the football. He did throw for 208 yards but plenty of those came in garbage time toward the end of the fourth quarter when Illinois was keeping things in front of them. The Wolverines will once again evaluate the quarterback position next week.
The defense played better — for the most part. Michigan held Luke Altmyer to 80 yards through the air, but several key penalties allowed the Illini drives to keep going. The Wolverines’ defense bent plenty, but never truly broke. The Michigan defense played well enough to win the game but the Wolverines’ offense struggled mightily.
Using Pro Football Focus, here are the top and worst player grades from Michigan’s loss to Illinois. We also include player snap counts you should know.
TE Hogan Hansen – 77.2 grade
TE Colston Loveland – 75.0 grade
RB Kalel Mullings – 73.4 grade
RT Andrew Gentry – 66.7 grade
TE Marlin Klein – 64.8 grade
QB Jack Tuttle – 28.7 grade
LT Jeff Persi – 51.4 grade
TE Max Bredeson – 51.6 grade
WR Tyler Morris – 52.5 grade
WR Kendrick Bell – 53.4 grade
DT Mason Graham – 86.9 grade
LB Jaishawn Barham – 82.6 grade
Edge Josaiah Stewart – 78.5 grade
DT Kenneth Grant – 74.3 grade
Edge TJ Guy – 70.9 grade
LB Ernest Hausmann – 52.5 grade
CB Aamir Hall – 53.8 grade
DT Trey Pierce – 55.2 grade
CB Zeke Berry – 57.7 grade
CB Will Johnson – 57.9 grade
WR Amorion Walker played 29 snaps — a season high — he was behind Tyler Morris (47), Kendrick Bell (34), and Semaj Morgan (32).
RB Donovan Edwards tied a season-low of 27 snaps played. Kalel Mullings had 50 snaps while Ben Hall played in one.
Largely due to TE Marlin Klein leaving the game, freshman TE Hogan Hansen played a season-high of 15 snaps.
With Will Johnson leaving the game early, CB Aamir Hall played in 51 snaps — second most of any corner.
True freshman cornerback Mason Curtis played in 22 snaps which was his first appearance of the year on defense.
Michigan didn’t rotate its linebackers much. Ernest Hausmann (55) and Jaishawn Barham (53) dominated snaps. Backups Jimmy Rolder (8) and Jaydon Hood (8) were used sparingly.
– Enjoy more Michigan Wolverines coverage on Michigan Wolverines On SI –
Takeaways: Michigan football gets out-dueled once again, takes loss to Illinois
Social media reacts Michigan football’s lethargic loss to Illinois
Barstool’s Dave Portnoy reassures Michigan fans following terrible loss to Illinois
Illinois
Bears again expand stadium search, including outside Illinois
CHICAGO — Three days before hosting their biggest game at Soldier Field in years, the Chicago Bears are exploring moving outside the city for which they are named.
In an open letter to fans Wednesday evening, team president and CEO Kevin Warren said the Bears will explore other locations — including outside of Cook County, where the team owns a 326-acre property in Arlington Heights, Illinois — to build a domed stadium.
That includes moving the Bears out of Illinois altogether.
“In addition to Arlington Park, we need to expand our search and critically evaluate opportunities throughout the wider Chicagoland region, including Northwest Indiana,” Warren said. “This is not about leverage. We spent years trying to build a new home in Cook County. We invested significant time and resources evaluating multiple sites and rationally decided on Arlington Heights.
“Our fans deserve a world-class stadium. Our players and coaches deserve a venue that matches the championship standard they strive for every day. With that in mind, our organization must keep every credible pathway open to deliver that future.”
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker pushed back against a potential move of the team out of the state.
“Suggesting the Bears would move to Indiana is a startling slap in the face to all the beloved and loyal fans who have been rallying around the team during this strong season,”Pritzker spokesperson Matt Hill said in a statement. “The Governor’s a Bears fan who has always wanted them to stay in Chicago. He has also said that ultimately they are a private business.”
The Bears purchased the Arlington Park property that formerly housed the Arlington International Racecourse for $197 million in 2023, shortly before Warren replaced Ted Phillips as team president and CEO. The Bears proposed building a 60,000-seat fixed-roof stadium within a $5 billion mixed-use development.
Not long after closing on the land in Arlington Heights, the team began exploring options for a new stadium site when it announced its plans to build at the Arlington Park site were “at risk” as negotiations over property taxes reached a $100 million impasse.
Shortly before the 2024 draft, the Bears shifted their focus to building their new stadium on the lakefront south of Soldier Field and announced they would invest more than $2 billion in private money into the construction and development of the stadium and surrounding areas.
Although the team has maintained that the construction of a new stadium will be privately funded, concerns over the burden placed on taxpayers to fund the infrastructure around the stadium led to an impasse. That led the Bears to explore Arlington Heights once again as an option, which Warren announced during league meetings in April. Ahead of the Bears’ home opener against theMinnesota Vikingson Sept. 8, Warren released a letter to fans, saying the team’s sights were set on building in Arlington Heights. He has said throughout the year that the goal was to break ground before the end of 2025.
However, the Bears have been in a battle with lawmakers over tax breaks and securing $855 million in public funding for costs related to building the new stadium.
“We have not asked for state taxpayer dollars to build the stadium at Arlington Park,” Warren said. “We asked only for a commitment to essential local infrastructure [roads, utilities, and site improvements], which is more than typical for projects of this size. Additionally, we sought reasonable property tax certainty to secure financing. We listened to state leadership and relied on their direction and guidance, yet our efforts have been met with no legislative partnership.”
The Bears’ current lease at Soldier Field runs through 2033. On Saturday night, the 10-4 Bears will host the Green Bay Packers in a high-stakes meeting that will heavily determine Chicago’s path to the postseason.br/]
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Illinois
Last-minute gifts made in Illinois, local small businesses
Wednesday, December 17, 2025 6:44PM
CHICAGO (WLS) — There’s still time to get a gift under the tree that is made in Illinois.
ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch
The Illinois Office of Tourism is out with its “Illinois-Made Holiday Gift Guide.”
Seventeen small businesses from across the state are featured.
From soap, to popcorn, to fudge and coffee, there are some great ideas.
Kribi Coffee Air Roastery, Garrett Popcorn Shops, The Fudge Pot and Soapy Roads are some of the brands featured in the list.
To see the full guide, click here.
Copyright © 2025 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Illinois
Illinois high school football playoffs expanding in 2026
BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (KWQC) – The IHSA football playoffs will be expanding by 50 percent in 2026.
IHSA member schools approved an amendment to expand the playoffs from 32 teams per class to 48.
There will still be 8 classifications increasing the total number of playoff teams from 256 to 384.
As a result of the change, the start of the season will be moved up by a week in August to allow the season to still finish with State Championship games the week of Thanksgiving.
Copyright 2025 KWQC. All rights reserved.
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