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Originally Posted by Via Chicago
who's going bankrupt? well, the city, hence why there aint no money for whatever bullshit the bears are crying house poor over. but you cant have it both ways and say theyre one of the most valuable franchises in history, and then have it be justified that they need taxpayer support or an incentive to be located in a particular location. clearly SF is a Park District facility and it has managed to work just fine up til now. theres nothing "wrong" with it, theyre just being greedy and want to build in even more revenue sources than they have today. but i agree that maybe the time has come to just let them go on their way. it dosent feel like theyre going to be satisfied with anything short of some mega stadium with a dome surrounded by a sea of parking since we keep seeming to have this conversation once every decade, and theres no way to make SF fit that mode nor the money to finance it. piggy banks empty. which brings me back to...what are we negotiating here exactly? if this is just about in-stadium advertising and naming rightss, well maybe those things are negotiable maybe theyre not, but it dosent really comport that if those are the issues they would need to be publicly shopping around for a big plot of land elsewhere
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I'm not one to argue for billionaires, but I haven't seen anything other than the words of Lightfoot that this is a negotiating tactic. The Bears themselves haven't said anything at all. I don't see what concessions they would be trying to get from the city to make Soldier Field equipped for a 21st century NFL team. Maybe they've already made up their mind to move to Arlington Heights? And in that case... fine? The city would still be getting the bulk tourists, diners, etc. that travel from out of the area to go a game. They would be far from the first sports team to play a few miles outside the eponymous city.
If I was to ever attend another live Bears game, I would rather hop on the Metra and sit in a warm, domed stadium with state-of-the-art facilities than walk the 2 miles from State/Roosevelt in blistering cold wind to sit in a 100-year-old bowl on the shore of Lake Michigan in December. I'm sure I'm not the only would-be spectator to feel that way.
I say more power to them, it's not like they are pulling a Dean Spanos and threatening to move completely out of the area if they don't get hundreds of millions of dollars for a stadium. Seems like they are just quietly preparing to move to a more feasible in-market location to maximize the potential of the team.