Curious Hair wrote:
The Great Northern wrote:
Curious Hair wrote:
The Great Northern wrote:
Unreal that the city is actually going to let this shit happen.
I can't believe so many people are so happy about it. They hate Lightfoot that much?
Most people have absolutely no taste. If you tell them "cheap easy parking" they are fully in.
I still have hope this process drags out long enough that a new mayor gets in office who can agree with the Bears on another major renovation to Soldier Field. One that might even get landmark status back. Lightfoot seems to resigned to losing them. Next election is less than a year and a half away. I doubt the Bears break ground on a new stadium before then.
The thing I don't get is how many people are taking this new attitude that
this is what's been holding the Bears back. The problem all along was a lakefront stadium in the city and not [gestures broadly] all of this? We all seem to agree that the McCaskeylings are these dead-eyed mutants who can't walk into a room without consulting an instruction manual, but now for some reason two-thirds of the fanbase thinks that those same mutants should spearhead a massive mixed-use real estate project and that nothing can possibly go wrong with that. Okay.
The dumbest and therefore likeliest possible outcome is that an Arlington Park stadium is just Soldier Field but more so: a monument of and to luxury suites that limits the general population more than any other stadium in the league. Watch it only be 64,000 seats instead of 61,000. But it'll have DOME!
You did argue before that baseball stadiums should be in cities and football stadiums should be in the suburbs. I believe it had to do with the Cubs or Sox moving.
This is great news. Let cities play hardball and see what happens. Build a domed stadium in Arlington Heights. Get the Big Ten football title game and a few Final Fours. If Detroit, Minneapolis, and Indianapolis are midwestern cities with an indoor domed stadium then why is a place with just as bad weather but also a lake that amplifies it stuck in the 60s?
The city should have been desperate to build a domed stadium for either the White Sox or Bears and instead they though Chicago was too big to have to care.