Chicago Sports

As LA preps for Super Bowl, Bears eye new stadium of their own

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — So as not to block the landing pattern of incoming flights, the most expensive stadium ever built is buried 100 feet underground three miles east of Los Angeles International Airport, between the north and south runways.

The sweeping canopy roof is unattached to the walls of SoFi Stadium, making it indoors and outdoors all at once. From the sky, though, it becomes the biggest television on the planet. On top of the stadium’s sweeping roof sits 27,000 hexagonal pucks, each containing four LED nodes apiece. Strung together, they allow SoFi Stadium to display messages — and even live-stream events — to the thousands of people staring out airplane windows on the approach to LAX. For many, it’s the first part of the Los Angeles area they see.

In a league defined by its over-the-top ventures, SoFi Stadium is unlike any project the NFL has ever undertaken. Returning the NFL to Los Angeles — the Rams came from St. Louis and the Chargers from San Diego — took a venture bold, innovative and expensive. At a cost of $5.5 billion, paid for by Rams owner and real estate developer Stan Kroenke, the 70,240-seat stadium is attached to a 6,000-seat theater by a plaza, all underneath the sweeping roof.

The stadium sits on a 298-acre plot, complete with a lake and landscaping designed to represent all of California, from pine trees to chaparral. The NFL Network’s West Coast offices sit in a 450,000 square foot building across a parking lot. By the time construction is completed — it’s about 65 percent done — developers will have at least that much retail space, plus room for 2,500 residences and 25 acres of public parkland. The office building district alone could one day be five million square feet.

“We have created Southern California’s first indoor-outdoor mega experience,” said Jason Gannon, SoFI Stadium’s managing director.

The world will see it Sunday. At the end of its second season of operation, the NFL’s most daring project hosts the Super Bowl between the Bengals and the hometown Rams.

Sometime in the next decade, the Chicago area could do the same.

o o o

Less than a week after Arlington Park Racetrack ran its last horse race in September, the Bears announced they’d agreed to buy the 326-acre plot for $197.2 million. The team expects to close escrow sometime in the next year.

Speaking publicly for the first time in a year, Bears chairman George McCaskey said last month he didn’t want to look beyond the escrow period. President/CEO Ted Phillips wasn’t as cautious, though. Of the land, he said “there was nothing like it in Chicagoland.” The project, he said, would “put Arlington Heights on the map as a destination spot.”

The Bears have a lease at Soldier Field through 2033, though the team could break it early to build the stadium they want in Arlington Heights. Last month, McCaskey was careful not to rule out more negotiations with the City of Chicago to stay there. Speaking on WSCR-AM on Friday, mayor Lori Lightfoot said the city was “working on some plans to present to them that I think will make a very, very compelling case as to why it makes abundant sense for them to stay in Chicago.” Ultimately, she said, the “decision will be theirs.”

The Arlington Heights project would likely feature an indoor stadium to host events 12 months per year, and figures to be part of a mixed-use development with bars, restaurants, retail shops and housing. The Bears would likely partner with a developer to defray construction costs for a mixed-use property.

It’s hard to see the Bears receiving state funding to move, though the Village of Arlington Heights could contribute. Like other recent teams that moved — both across town or into new states — the team would receive a construction loan from the NFL.

The Arlington Park plot is a lot like the one that SoFi Stadium sits on now. Both were first horse tracks. Hollywood Park Racetrack ran its last race in December 2013 after 75 years of operation. A month later, the NFL confirmed Kroenke bought a 60-acre parcel of land next to it, though his company wouldn’t state specifically what it was for. A year later, he partnered with the owners of the track to announce plans for a stadium — even though his own team, the Rams, were still in St. Louis.

An indoor stadium in Arlington Heights would land the Chicago area a Super Bowl for the first time ever. But probably no more than that.

“When you design a new NFL building, you’re pretty much guaranteed to get the Super Bowl at some point,” said David Manica, who owns Manica Architecture and designed Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. “And there are some factors we have to keep an eye on to make sure it can accomodate those needs when that event comes.”

Stadiums must have a seating capacity of at least 65,000 — or 3,500 more fans than Soldier Field can hold — to host a Super Bowl. The NFL requires a certain number of luxury suites and premium seats for its corporate clients and a press box large enough to accommodate media from around the world. Any new stadium the Bears build would check all those boxes.

Super Bowl week is filled with corporate events for the NFL’s business partners. Those executives and their own clients want to be somewhere warm. From a practical standpoint, everything from party tents to al fresco dining to transportation could be ruined by snow, ice and rain. For that reason, the NFL typically rewards new stadiums in cold-weather cities with one Super Bowl — and only only.

Since 2011, the Cowboys, Colts, Jets/Giants, 49ers and Vikings have all hosted a Super Bowl in the first four years of their stadiums’ existence. Only two of those stadiums figure to host one again — AT&T Stadium in Dallas and Levi’s Stadium in San Francisco — though neither are on the current schedule.

o o o

The designer of both SoFi Stadium and U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Lance Evans makes sure each stadium has a unique sense of place. An Arlington Heights stadium would, too.

“If I were to attack it, No. 1, there should be no preconceived notions about what the building should look like,” he said. “But there’s a rich history of the Chicago Bears and a rich architectural history of the city of Chicago. And there’s unlimited opportunity to combine those two into a unique experience.”

He was intentionally vague. Manica declined comment when asked about a Bears site — presumably because every major stadium architect, including their firms, would bid on the project were it to become reality.

Evans is a principal and director of sports for HKS Architecture, which also designed stadiums for the Colts and Cowboys. Their plans all represented the place in which they live — Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis feels a bit like Hinkle Fieldhouse of “Hoosiers” fame. AT&T Stadium is as big as the state of Texas.

SoFi Stadium has a roof, but also a breeze.

“It feels like Southern California when you walk into SoFi,” Evans said.

To make a stadium feel familiar — but different — requires months of research about what makes a place unique. The ideas are then pitched to the clients — the NFL owner — and fine-tuned from there.

Manica, who first worked with the Raiders when they explored a stadium in Southern California, knew he wanted Allegiant Stadium to have a sleak, fast appearance — “the feeling of a black Massarati,” he said. It helped that Raiders owner Mark Davis loves sports cars.

The Raiders’ color palette meant black, white and silver were the only shades Manica was allowed to use. The black glass on the outside of the stadium proved to be a smart choice, anyway, protecting it from the hot Las Vegas sun.

“Basically the building has sunglasses on, permanently,” he said. “It’s nice and cool in there, even when it’s 115 degrees out.”

Another non-negotiable detail was the signature torch that the Raiders wanted to build to mimic the one they had in Oakland. Manica decided to slide the footprint of the building as far toward the Las Vegas Strip as he could in his 62-acre plot. The torch went on that end, too, allowing fans to see the hotels in the distance. The stadium’s retractable field — the Raiders play on grass, UNLV on turf — slide out of the other end of the stadium.

The stadium opened in 2020, only three years after the design plan began and two years after the Raiders broke ground. The Bears project would not move that fast.

When the Vikings first started planning their $1.1 billion stadium a decade ago, they didn’t have an expectation of what the stadium would look like. Evans drew on local culture. His research showed that Minnesotans valued the outdoors, even in winter, so he made the 240,000 square foot roof out of ETFE, a plastic that let natural light in. Drawing on Nordic culture of the area — and not just the team name — he designed the stadium to look like a traditional Viking longhouse, with a pitched roof. It has a practical purpose.

“It’s a more responsible way to shift the snow off the roof,” Evans said.

SoFi Stadium has ways to deal with its own environmental challenges. On an active fault line, the stadium sits on a “seismic moat” that is 12 feet wide and 100 feet deep to keep it safe in an earthquake.

The Bears have been impressed by the Vikings’ stadium since it opened in 2016. It’s a motivating factor in trying to build their own. An Arlington Heights stadium would be far more in line with U.S. Bank Stadium than with SoFi Stadium — and likely at less than half the cost of the $5.5 billion Kroenke spent.

The design, though, would be unique to Chicago, probably playing off the tradition and history the McCaskeys hold so dear.

“The observations that we bring forth about a community or a fan base or a team — and then seeing how those the ownership for the team responds to them — is a beautiful thing that creates the uniqueness in the architecture,” Evans said.

o o o

Because NFL teams are guaranteed only 10 games per year, mixed-use cites are the future of stadium architecture. The last five NFL stadiums to be built all cost at least $1 billion; creating year-round reasons for people to use the property — be it to go shopping or attend a concert or even live — allows revenue streams to flow 12 months a year.

That’s what the Bears are eyeing; Phillips said Arlington Heights could be an “entertainment destination with multiple facets” to the property.

“As much joy and energy and excitement as sports buildings bring to a city, they’re admittedly used on a less frequent basis,” Manica said. “They have challenges to be open and operational every day.

“I am finding, and we are finding around the world, that these buildings are becoming part of a broader mixed-use building. That brings more value on event days and a better use of the land on non-event days.”

Manica designed the Chase Center, the Warriors’ new home in San Francisco, with an arena, 100,000 square feet of food retail space, two commercial office buildings, parking for almost 1,000 cars and 3.2 acres of plazas.

“I think you’ll continue to see the trend of large-scale sporting venues associated with other ancillary mixed-use developments,” Evans said. “That’s because they’re much more mutually beneficial to each other as it relates to creating a destination.”

The sight lines of new stadiums are designed to handle more than one sport. They have to.

“For an NFL building it means a lot more than designing it for NFL games,” Manica said. “It has to be multipurpose and serve a lot of different uses for the city and the owners of the building.”

SoFi Stadium has two tenants: the Chargers, who contributed a $200 million loan to the project and pay $1 per year in rent, and the Rams. It can’t host basketball yet — it’s technically open-air, though it could manufacture a temporary screen system –but it will host the 2028 Summer Olympics.

A decade from now, an Arlington Heights stadium could host everything from political conventions to concerts, from the Final Four to a bowl game, from wrestling bouts to international soccer matches.

o o o

The centerpiece of SoFi Stadium is its 360-foot,double-sided oculus videoboard that hangs over the field. At 2.2 million pounds, it’s so heavy that it anchors the sweeping roof in storms. Modern stadiums need to compete with our own cell phones; the oculus does that, and more.

“It needed to be more than just a place for replays,” Evans said.

The players don’t notice the oculus as much as they do what’s on the field. After the Bears opened their season at SoFi Stadium, tight end Cole Kmet — an Arlington Heights native — gushed over the grass and quality of the locker room.

“If you have that much land out in Arlington Heights,” he said then, “I can only imagine what they can do with that space.”

Thousands of Bears fans are wondering the same thing.

“These are some of the most complicated structures that any city can endeavor to build,” Manica said. “They’re also the buildings that bring people the most joy. I think you’d be hard-pressed to find any building people like going to more than a stadium to see their teams play. Courthouses and shopping malls and movie theaters don’t get that kind of joy that stadiums do.

“They become icons and hallmarks for the city. There’s an incredible amount of pride and joy wrapped up in these buildings.”

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Bulls put up a season-high 134 points, after standing pat at deadline

Bulls coach Billy Donovan and his front office “likes this group.”

That was the attitude going into Thursday’s trade deadline, and coming out without a move all they did was double-down on it.

In a complete dismantling of the Timberwolves on Friday night, maybe Donovan & Co. were on to something.

Thanks to a 35-point night from All-Star DeMar DeRozan, as well as Nikola Vucevic chipping in with 26, the Bulls (35-21) put up a 42-point fourth quarter to run away from the visiting team in a season-high fashion, beating Minnesota 134-122.

That’s why there wasn’t much stress coming out of the idea that while teams in the Eastern Conference like Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Cleveland made significant trades, the Bulls chose to stand pat.

“When we get healthy and we do we do what we supposed to do, I don’t see anybody better than us in the East,” All-Star guard Zach LaVine told reporters, when asked about the quiet deadline for his team. “That’s just my opinion. Competition-wise, you step on the line, you go throw the ball up, I don’t think anybody’s better than us.”

Donovan wasn’t going to be as bold, but again, felt OK with the idea of working on getting the likes of Patrick Williams (wrist surgery), Lonzo Ball (knee surgery) and Alex Caruso (wrist surgery) back on the court, and along the way if a buyout candidate presents himself go ahead and grab him.

“If there’s something that can help us, certainly I think [executive vice president of basketball operations] Arturas [Karnisovas] will do his job … the player piece of it will be how does a player fit here? Is the player comfortable in that role? You want it to be a good chemistry piece for your team,” Donovan said, speaking for the first time since the deadline.

That’s on Karnisovas and the front office to worry about right now.

Donovan has the Xs and Os to stress over, and making sure he can keep the healthy bodies up and running until help arrives.

That starts with LaVine, who looked to be dealing with a banged up body on his way to going 5-for-14 from the field for just 12 points.

“I just think this time of year I don’t feel anybody is feeling probably great,” Donovan said of LaVine. “He’s had to deal with his knee, he’s had to deal with his back. It’s a lot right now. We’ll have to work through this with him right now.”

That means meeting with LaVine before Saturday’s back-to-back with Oklahoma City and seeing if he needs a night to heal up a bit.

What didn’t need healing? The rest of the offense around LaVine, as the Bulls also shot a season-best 63.2% (55-for-87) from the field, getting contributions from Javonte Green and his 23 points, as well as Coby White coming off the bench for 22.

The Bulls also finished with 32 assists, and even out-rebounded the Timberwolves 43-32.

Then there was rookie Ayo Dosunmu, fresh out of the concussion protocol, scoring 14 points and handing out 10 assists.

“I felt good [Friday night],” Dosunmu said of the quick recovery. “We have so many great players on our team. It’s kind of my job to put guys into position to be successful. [Friday] was just an example of how we have guys that can play at a high level.

“When you’re all built for one common goal – to win and play for each other – that’s when it makes it easier on a coaching staff of who they can plug in. When you have guys [injured], other guys can step up and compete.”

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White Sox issue vax mandate in minor leagueson February 12, 2022 at 4:22 am

The Chicago White Sox are mandating COVID-19 booster shots for all minor league players, telling them in an email Friday that they “will not be able to participate” in spring training without being fully up-to-date on vaccinations, according to a copy of the letter obtained by ESPN.

The White Sox are the first team known to require vaccinations for minor league players. In late January, Major League Baseball told teams that vaccines would not be mandatory for minor league players but would be for managers, coaches and other staff that come into regular contact with players.

In the letter to players, the White Sox said players needed to send “proof of receiving the COVID booster vaccine” and that “you will need to have proof of vaccination before reporting to Spring Training or you will not be able to participate.” Players are expected to report to spring training Feb. 21. The White Sox last spring mandated vaccines for minor league players and, according to sources, had 100% compliance.

Because minor league players are not represented by a union, organizations can unilaterally implement rules such as a vaccine mandate. Major league players on teams’ 40-man rosters are not subject to a mandate, which would need to be collectively bargained.

The White Sox will not grant releases to minor leaguers who refuse to receive the vaccine, a source told ESPN, confirming a report in The Athletic.

Multiple minor leaguers currently in the White Sox organization are unvaccinated, sources told ESPN, and others have not received the COVID boosters the team is mandating.

In a statement, the team said: “The Chicago White Sox are requiring all of our employees to be up to date on their COVID-19 vaccination status, and this requirement extends to our minor-league players as well. We believe this is the right thing to do to protect the health and well being of all of our players and staff across the organization.”

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There’s plans in place for the Bulls’ Patrick Williams when he returns

The progress of Patrick Williams and his rehab from left wrist surgery continued to pick up the pace this last week.

“He was in Charlotte with us,” Bulls coach Billy Donovan said of the power forward. “He’s working, he’s getting workouts in, he’s able to do a lot more than he was several weeks ago.”

That’s why Donovan had a quick chat with Williams Friday afternoon, not only checking in on him, but letting him know what the focus the next month needs to be as he gets closer to a return.

The message from the coach? Get in as good a shape as possible, and then push that even further.

That was the mentality they took with Williams at the start of the summer and going into Summer League. They wanted the second-year player in the best shape he could be in with the mentality of being that defensive stopper that would guard the best wings in the game and be able to log in the heavy minutes that many of those elite wings play.

No change there, as the No. 4 pick from the 2020 draft could be back by mid-March.

“It’s hard because you’re not going against physical contact every day, but he has got to as best he can get himself in incredible shape,” Donovan said. “I thought that was a big focus for us going into the summer and then going into Summer League and training camp, and he did a good job with that. But he was able to play and do things we haven’t been able to do with him. It starts there.”

What else is being discussed internally is will they bring Williams back as a starter – the role he had before he suffered the injury just five games into this regular season? Or do they like what Javonte Green has given this starting unit and won’t be looking to disrupt that chemistry?

“Javonte has filled in and done a really nice job as a starter,” Donovan said. “The thing we would have to evaluate is do you bring him off the bench or start him? What does our team look like if we all are whole? And how well does he fit with maybe a first-unit group or a second-unit group, but his whole focus has to be athletically getting his skillset and athleticism into the game.”

The Sun-Times reported last month that Williams was on the fast track back, especially since the early diagnosis for the injury was it would cost him the entire regular season, with the hopes of getting back for a postseason run.

If he can now get back in mid-March, that would leave Williams possibly three weeks of a regular season to get his legs and rhythm back. Just don’t ask executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas about it.

“At some point I think you’re going to see him this year,” Karnisovas said on Thursday, when asked about Williams. “So in terms of timeline, we don’t have one for now. We don’t want to put any pressure on Patrick or us to bring him back.”

Bob and weave?

Karnisovas was asked about financial constraints factoring into standing pat at the trade deadline, and in usual Karnisovas fashion wouldn’t show his hand.

“I mean, there’s a lot of things that go into decision-making,” Karnisovas said.

It was reported several years ago, however, that with Michael Reinsdorf now having a stronger voice in Bulls business, paying the luxury tax hasn’t been an issue, especially if it means ownership feels like they have a contending team.

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Startling contrast in Bengals’ plan for QB Joe Burrow, Bears’ handling of Justin Fields

LOS ANGELES — From the day they drafted Joe Burrow with the No. 1 pick, the Bengals treated him like the franchise quarterback they hoped he’d become.

They didn’t wait to see it. They assumed it.

Listen as coach Zac Taylor explained Friday how they approached bringing him in as a rookie and notice how drastically different it sounds from the way the Bears handled Justin Fields this season.

“We wanted to make sure that we built this thing around him and how he’d feel most comfortable,” he said after practice at UCLA. “He should be involved in everything we do. That includes opinions on other players that we’re adding to the team, scheme, game plan and adjustments over the course of the game.

“I want him to feel comfortable on game day, because when he feels comfortable, he plays at a special level.”

It’s a jaw-dropping contrast between the Bengals and Bears, and everyone can see whose philosophy worked better.

Burrow had a promising rookie season despite it ending abruptly because he tore his ACL, then returned with a spectacular performance to take the Bengals to Super Bowl LVI. If he leads them to victory against the Rams on Sunday, he’ll become just the fifth quarterback to win a Super Bowl within his first two seasons.

Fields, meanwhile, didn’t get that rookie head start as he tried to sort through the clutter of former coach Matt Nagy’s offense and the organization’s misguided plan to sit him behind Andy Dalton the entire season.

It was Dalton’s mediocrity, by the way, that led the Bengals to burn it down and start over with Burrow.

While Burrow was a more highly rated and accomplished prospect, Fields was hardly a project after what he did at Ohio State. And the commitment level from an organization isn’t any different when a team drafts a quarterback at No. 1 versus No. 11 — especially when the Bears also gave up their 2022 first-rounder to get him.

Fields’ rookie season was mostly a wreck with occasional bright spots that offered big-time hope. His numbers reflect the dysfunction of working in an offense that wasn’t tailored to his skills, playing with limited personnel and being sandbagged by spending the whole offseason as a second-stringer.

It’s no wonder he performed so choppily. Fields played 12 games, starting 10, and finished with seven touchdown passes, 10 interceptions, an average of 239 yards in his starts and a wince-worthy final passer rating of 72.3.

The situation Burrow walked into was nearly the complete opposite, and the benefit is undeniable.

“That was huge,” he said. “As a young quarterback, you just need to get reps and get out there and play. If I had gone into camp with the mindset that I had to compete for a job, it would’ve limited my ability to figure out what works on an NFL level.

“I was able to make mistakes and make throws that I probably wouldn’t have made if I was competing for a job. I was able to feel out those mistakes because I knew I was gonna be the starter.”

Cringe. The Bears should’ve hired this guy as a consultant.

Burrow had his fair share of stinkers over his 10 starts as a rookie, but the overall results were solid — 13 touchdowns, five interceptions, 89.8 rating — and, more importantly, he took the necessary steps to set up what he did in Year 2.

He accelerated from good to great with a late surge of 11 touchdowns and no picks over his final four games and has been irrepressible in the playoffs. He’s been taking sacks constantly because the Bengals still have work to do on their offensive line, but he’s operating the offense like it belongs to him.

The more Burrow talks about everything the Bengals did to ensure his success, the more stomach-turning it is to recall how the Bears mismanaged Fields.

New coach Matt Eberflus and offensive coordinator Luke Getsy are intent on doing it right and treating next season as a do-over for Fields.

Eberflus said in his opening press conference they’d be, “building this offense around him and his strengths.” Getsy described the process of formulating his offense as a collaboration with Fields because it’ll be a “quarterback-driven” scheme.

That’ll give them the best shot at unlocking Fields’ potential.

Who knows if he can be as good as Burrow? No, seriously, who actually knows that? Because after his chaotic rookie season, it’s for anyone to be certain about anything with Fields. It’s why he needed a reset so badly and embraced the hiring of Eberflus and Getsy. Now it’s up to them to give him the full Burrow treatment and see how far he can go.

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Whether the Bears stay or go, the future is now for the Museum Campus

Kudos to Mayor Lori Lightfoot for forming a 23-member working group tasked with reimagining the Museum Campus and seeking ways to make the destination a year-round attraction for visitors.

“The Museum Campus is an integral part of Chicago and a huge contributor to our city’s culture and economy,” Lightfoot said in a statement Tuesday. “In order to maximize the benefits of its valuable assets, as well as address larger issues about the campus, recommendations from dedicated and talented community leaders are absolutely necessary.”

Nearly a quarter-century after the campus’s creation, the city is wise to contemplate a major refresh of the site. Especially now, with the Chicago Bears contemplating leaving Soldier Field when their lease there ends in 2033, the Shedd Aquarium preparing for an eight-year, $500 million rebirth, and the possibility of Lakeside Center being converted into a casino.

Improving an urban design triumph

The park-like 57-acre campus was created in 1998 when a stretch of DuSable Lake Shore Drive that separated the Field Museum and Soldier Field from the Shedd Aquarium and the Adler Planetarium was moved westward.

With the roadway gone, patrons can easily visit the destinations in the campus — or at least traverse among them. The change also provided more much-needed lakefront green space.

The campus was an urban design triumph at the time, but time has revealed weaknesses that the working committee must now work to solve.

For example, while DuSable Lake Shore Drive was relocated, large parking lots and boulevard-like access roads that were built as part of the 2004 Soldier Field renovation — not to mention the existing parking for McCormick Place’s Lakeside Center — gobble up far too much potential open space.

You can’t get rid of all of it, of course, but a reduction would help.

Friends of the Park Executive Director Juanita Irizarry, a working group member, correctly raised this point.

“One of our biggest priorities is to remind the city that Mayor Daley made a commitment to move the Soldier Field parking lots to the west side of Lake Shore Drive back when the Museum Campus was created, and that commitment was never fulfilled,” she said.

But the most important items for the group will be rethinking Soldier Field and Lakeside Center.

The Bears signed an agreement to buy the 326-acre former Arlington International Racecourse for $197.2 million with an eye toward building a stadium there. The deal could close this year, but the Bears said they are still open to remaining at Soldier Field, if a deal there can be done.

Either way, the stadium’s future could include making it and the land immediately surrounding it suitable for more cultural events and concerts. Months before creating the working group, Lightfoot said she wanted to improve the visitor experience at Soldier Field and increase revenues from the stadium year-round.

“It’s an amazing location for cultural and sports events. Are there things that could continue? Should it be transformed? Should the new part of the stadium be removed and go back to the original? There are so many questions,” Openlands CEO and President Jerry Adelmann, who was also named to the working group, said.

A renewed Lakeside Center would be an asset to the city.

This editorial board has not weighed in on the proposal to put a casino at Lakeside Center and is not doing so here.

But given the building’s vast spaces, plus its Arie Crown Theater and proximity to Northerly Island, the complex cries out for restoration and new public use of some sort. The working group would do well to examine a range of options for the structure.

Creating a special place

Working group member Jack Lavin, president of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, said a revamp would be a chance to “maximize the economic opportunity of the entire Museum Campus.”

Certainly, the campus should make a buck when it can. But if there is a word of caution in this whole thing, it’s that the working group and the city must resist the urge to see a revamped Museum Campus purely as a revenue generator.

The guidestar should be the creation of a special place where Chicago’s lakefront, art, culture and open space design can be enjoyed by everyone.

That means creating a beautiful space that compliments the museums, stadium and (hopefully) revamped convention center that it neighbors.

It also means improving the Metra and CTA connections so that more people can easily get there without driving.

Make the Museum Campus even better, and people will certainly come. And in this case the city and the working group have enough time to get a refresh right.

The city can do no less than develop a high-quality plan that will help re-energize both the campus and the city.

Send letters to [email protected].

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Friday’s high school basketball scores

Friday, February 11, 2022

BIG NORTHERN

Oregon at Dixon, 7:00

Rockford Christian at Rock Falls, 7:00

Stillman Valley at Winnebago, 7:00

CATHOLIC – BLUE

Brother Rice at Mount Carmel, 7:00

Fenwick at Loyola, 7:00

Leo at St. Laurence, 7:00

St. Rita at DePaul, 7:00

CATHOLIC – WHITE

Marmion at Providence, 7:00

Providence-St. Mel at St. Francis de Sales, 7:00

St. Ignatius at Montini, 7:00

CENTRAL SUBURBAN – NORTH

Deerfield at Maine East, 7:00

Highland Park at Niles North, 7:00

Vernon Hills at Maine West, 7:00

CENTRAL SUBURBAN – SOUTH

Evanston at Niles West, 7:00

Glenbrook South at Maine South, 7:00

New Trier at Glenbrook North, 7:00

DU KANE

Batavia at St. Charles East, 7:15

Lake Park at Wheaton-Warr. South, 7:15

St. Charles North at Glenbard North, 7:15

Wheaton North at Geneva, 7:15

DU PAGE VALLEY

Naperville Central at DeKalb, 7:00

Naperville North at Metea Valley, 7:00

Waubonsie Valley at Neuqua Valley, 7:00

FOX VALLEY

Burlington Central at Crystal Lake South, 7:30

Crystal Lake Central at Huntley, 7:30

Dundee-Crown at McHenry, 7:30

Jacobs at Hampshire, 7:30

Prairie Ridge at Cary-Grove, 7:30

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Herscher at Streator, 6:45

Lisle at Wilmington, 7:00

Manteno at Peotone, 7:00

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL

Latin at Northridge, 6:00

Morgan Park Academy at North Shore, 6:00

INTERSTATE EIGHT

Morris at Plano, 7:00

Ottawa at LaSalle-Peru, 7:00

Rochelle at Sandwich, 6:45

Sycamore at Kaneland, 7:00

KISHWAUKEE RIVER

Richmond-Burton at Woodstock, 7:00

Woodstock North at Harvard, 7:00

LITTLE TEN

Earlville at Somonauk, 7:00

Hiawatha at Serena, 6:30

IMSA at Leland, CNL

LaMoille at Indian Creek, 6:45

Newark at Hinckley-Big Rock, 7:00

METRO PREP

Horizon-McKinley at Lycee Francais, 5:30

METRO SUBURBAN – BLUE

Chicago Christian at Aurora Christian, 7:30

Riverside-Brookfield at Timothy Christian, 7:30

Wheaton Academy at IC Catholic, 7:30

METRO SUBURBAN – RED

Aurora Central at Elmwood Park, 7:00

McNamara at Ridgewood, 7:00

Westmont at St. Edward, 7:00

MID-SUBURBAN – EAST

Elk Grove at Hersey, 7:30

Prospect at Buffalo Grove, 7:30

Rolling Meadows at Wheeling, 7:30

MID-SUBURBAN – WEST

Barrington at Palatine, 7:30

Conant at Fremd, 7:30

Schaumburg at Hoffman Estates, 7:30

NIC – 10

Belvidere North at Belvidere, 7:00

Boylan at Auburn, 7:30

Freeport at Harlem, 7:30

Guilford at Jefferson, 7:00

Rockford East at Hononegah, 7:00

NORTH SUBURBAN

Lake Zurich at Waukegan, 7:00

Stevenson at Libertyville, 7:00

Warren at Lake Forest, 7:00

Zion-Benton at Mundelein, 7:00

NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY

Antioch at North Chicago, 7:00

Grant at Grayslake North, 7:00

Lakes at Round Lake, 7:00

Wauconda at Grayslake Central, 7:00

SOUTH SUBURBAN – BLUE

Lemont at Hillcrest, 6:30

Thornton Fr. South at Bremen, 6:00

SOUTH SUBURBAN – RED

Argo at Richards, 6:30

Eisenhower at Reavis, 6:00

Evergreen Park at Shepard, 6:30

SOUTHLAND

Bloom at Crete-Monee, 5:00

Kankakee at Thornwood, 6:30

Rich at Thornridge, 7:00

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – EAST

Plainfield Central at Romeoville, 6:30

Plainfield South at Plainfield East, 6:30

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – WEST

Minooka at Yorkville, 6:30

Oswego at Oswego East, 6:30

West Aurora at Plainfield North, 6:30

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – BLUE

Bolingbrook at Lockport, 6:00

Lincoln-Way East at Homewood-Flossmoor, 6:30

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – RED

Bradley-Bourbonnais at Lincoln-Way West, 6:30

TRI-COUNTY

Lowpoint-Washburn at Midland, 7:00

Putnam County at Henry-Senachwine, 7:00

Seneca at Dwight, 7:30

Woodland at Marquette, 7:30

UPSTATE EIGHT

East Aurora at Larkin, 7:00

Glenbard East at South Elgin, 7:00

Glenbard South at Elgin, 7:00

Streamwood at Bartlett, 7:00

West Chicago at Fenton, 7:00

WEST SUBURBAN – GOLD

Hinsdale South at Addison Trail, 7:30

Proviso East at Morton, 6:00

Willowbrook at Leyden, 7:30

WEST SUBURBAN – SILVER

Downers Grove North at York, 7:30

Hinsdale Central at Lyons, 6:30

Oak Park-River Forest at Glenbard West, 7:30

NON CONFERENCE

ACERO-Cruz at ACERO-Soto, 5:00

Chicago Academy at Foreman, 5:00

Intrinsic-Downtown at Kennedy, 6:30

Lake County Baptist at Cristo Rey-St. Martin, 7:15

Lake Forest Acad-Org at Don Bosco (IN), 6:30

Payton at Lane, 5:00

Phoenix at Hubbard, 5:00

EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC TOURNAMENT

St. Viator at Carmel, 7:00

Nazareth at Marist, 7:00

Notre Dame at Benet, 7:00

St. Patrick at Marian Catholic, 7:00

NORTHEASTERN ATHLETIC TOURNAMENT

at Schaumburg Christian

South Beloit vs. Schaumburg Christian, 5:30

Mooseheart vs. Christian Life, 5:30

Westminster Christian vs. Alden-Hebron, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE PLAYOFFS – CONSOLATION

at Orr

Wells vs. Von Steuben. 5:00

Northside vs. Fenger, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE PLAYOFFS – BLUE

Englewood STEM at Ogden, 6:00

Steinmetz at Amundsen, 5:00

RIVER VALLEY ROUND-ROBIN

Donovan at Gardner-So. Wilmington, 6:45

Grant Park at Beecher, 7:00

Illinois Lutheran at St. Anne, 7:00

Momence at Clifton Central, 7:00

Tri-Point at Grace Christian, 7:00

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What the Chicago Bears Can Learn from the Cincinnati Bengals

This weekend, the Cincinnati Bengals reach the Super Bowl for the first time since 1988. They were massive underdogs going into the season and remain underdogs for the Big Game, but they’ve still managed to achieve excellent results through strategy and perseverance. Despite not reaching the Super Bowl in 33 years and not winning a playoff game in 31 years, they’ve managed to find success this season, and it certainly wasn’t a fluke.

In one glorious postseason season, the Bengals beat the Las Vegas Raiders in the wildcard round before going on the road to beat top seeds Tennessee in Nashville and top dogs Kansas City at Arrowhead. What does this mean for the Bears and the rest of the league? Everything. The success that the Bengals have achieved, even if they don’t win, is an example that other teams can follow. The Bengals might have odds of +170 at Betway for the Super Bowl, but at the start of the season, they were +15000.

How the Bengals Achieved Success

The Bengals have never won a Super Bowl in their 54-year history, but they’re one win away from surprising Super Bowl favorites Kansas City Chiefs and moving to their first NFL championship since 1988. The Bengals will face the NFC champion Los Angeles Rams on Sunday evening with a chance to lift the Vince Lombardi Trophy for the first time in franchise history.

The Bengals have built a young and exciting team, with offensive talents Joe Burrows and Ja’Marr Chase giving them the points they need to come from behind and get the results they need. Their season was punctuated with close and hard-fought games, showing they have grit and determination that other sides lack. This winning culture didn’t come from anywhere, it was built over time with recruitment and strategy.

Aside from the impressive performances from the players themselves, the Bengals have also shown a willingness to change things up when they’re not working. They’re an excellent second-half team, and coach Zac Taylor is always ready to make changes when needed. The team isn’t just aiming for the Super Bowl either. This has been part of a larger rebuild project that could see the Bengals continue to improve.

What the Bears Can Do to Achieve Similar Results

The day after the Bengals beat the Kansas City Chief in the AFC Championship Game to reach the Super Bowl, new Bears General Manager Ryan Poles gave his thoughts. “Yeah, absolutely, I think we can be competitive, and the beautiful thing about football is what we just saw with the Bengals.” Clearly, the thinking is that if the Bengals can do it, so can the Bears.

It’s hard to argue with that sentiment, and although the Bengals weren’t built overnight, there’s already a lot of quality in the Bears’ roster. Under Poles and new head coach Matt Eberflus, the Bears have enough potential to avoid a full rebuild, even if they’ll have to be exceedingly careful with little draft capital and a precarious cap situation.

There’s a lot that the Bears can learn a lot from the success of the Bengals. First and most importantly, the team should do everything possible to find Fields a good receiver or two. Having an excellent quarterback isn’t much use without one, and the success of the Bengals has been formed on the partnership between Burrows and rookie wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase.

The second thing to keep in mind is that growth can take time, especially in sports where injuries can always derail the best-laid plans. For the Bears, reaching the Super Bowl is most likely a long shot right now. However, things seemed impossible for the Bengals at one point too. If the right changes can be made, there’s no reason why the Bears can’t improve results and go on a similar run next season. 

 

The post What the Chicago Bears Can Learn from the Cincinnati Bengals first appeared on CHICITYSPORTS.

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New bobblehead collection will benefit Negro Leagues Baseball Museum

The National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum has debuted a new line of Negro Leagues Field of Legends bobbleheads. The bobbleheads replicate the 13 life-size statues featured at the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum’s Field of Legends.

The bobbleheads are available individually or as a puzzle set, which is a full replica of the Field of Legends, including the outfield walls and scoreboard, at the Negro Leagues Museum in Kansas City, Missouri.

The Field of Legends Puzzle Set is individually numbered to only 200 and is $625 while the individual bobbleheads are $35 each or $400 for the set of 13.

The bobbleheads were produced by the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum in conjunction with the NLBM and NegroLeaguesHistory.com. Sales of the bobbleheads will support the NLBM.

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